posted on 2020-12-31, 23:13authored byRenad Almughathawi, Songjun Hou, Qingqing Wu, Zitong Liu, Wenjing Hong, Colin Lambert
Manipulating
the connectivity of external electrodes to central
rings of carbon-based molecules in single molecule junctions is an
effective route to tune their thermoelectrical properties. Here we
investigate the connectivity dependence of the thermoelectric properties
of a series of thiophene-diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) derivative molecules
using density functional theory and tight-binding modeling, combined
with quantum transport theory. We find a significant dependence of
electrical conductance on the connectivity of the two thiophene rings
attached to the DPP core. Interestingly, for connectivities corresponding
to constructive quantum interference (CQI), different isomers obtained
by rotating the thiophene rings possess the same electrical conductance
while those corresponding to destructive quantum interference (DQI)
show huge conductance variations upon ring rotation. Furthermore,
we find that DQI connectivity leads to enhanced Seebeck coefficients,
which can reach 500–700 μV/K. After including the contribution
to the thermal conductance from phonons, the full figure of merit
(ZT) for the CQI molecules could reach 1.5 at room
temperature and it would further increase to 2 when temperature elevates
to 400 K. Finally, we demonstrate that doping with tetracyanoquinodimethane
can change the sign of the Seebeck coefficients by forming a charge-transfer
system with the DPP.