4.8 Article

Charge Transport in C60-Based Dumbbell-type Molecules: Mechanically Induced Switching between Two Distinct Conductance States

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 137, Issue 6, Pages 2318-2327

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja511271e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [200021-124643, NFP 62]
  2. German Science Foundation [SPP 1243]
  3. UK EPSRC
  4. EC FP7 ITN FUNMOLS project [212942]
  5. European Commission (Community Research and Development Information Service, MOLESCO) [606728]
  6. University of Bern
  7. CONACyT, Mexico [209297]
  8. SCIEX [10.209]
  9. Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [14-05180S]
  10. Ministerio de Ecoomia y Competitividad (MINECO) of Spain [CTQ2011-24652]

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Single molecule charge transport characteristics of buckminsterfullerene-capped symmetric fluorene-based dumbbell-type compound 1 were investigated by scanning tunneling microscopy break junction (STM-BJ), current sensing atomic force microscopy break junction (CS-AFM-BJ), and mechanically controlled break junction (MCBJ) techniques, under ambient conditions. We also show that compound 1 is able to form highly organized defect-free surface adlayers, allowing the molecules on the surface to be addressed specifically. Two distinct single molecule conductance states (called high G(H)(1) and low G(L)(1)) were observed, depending on the pressure exerted by the probe on the junction, thus allowing molecule 1 to function as a mechanically driven molecular switch. These two distinct conductance states were attributed to the electron tunneling through the buckminsterfullerene anchoring group and fully extended molecule 1, respectively. The assignment of conductance features to these configurations was further confirmed by control experiments with asymmetrically designed buckminsterfullerene derivative 2 as well as pristine buckminsterfullerene 3, both lacking the G(L) feature.

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