posted on 2017-03-23, 00:00authored byQi Zhou, Atsushi Yamada, Qingguo Feng, Austin Hoskins, Barry D. Dunietz, Kim M. Lewis
Acetylthio-protected
free base porphyrins are used to form scanning tunneling microscope-molecular
break junctions. The porphyrin molecules are deprotected in situ,
before the self-assembly. Two types of molecular junctions are formed
in the junctions: Au-S-Por-SAc-Au and Au-S-Por-S-Au. Lower conductance
values and higher conductance values are observed. Computational modeling
attributes the lower conductance to the Au-S-Por-SAc-Au junctions
and the higher conductance to the Au-S-Por-S-Au junctions. First-principles
calculation suggests that the reduced conductance in the protected
porphyrin originates from the presence of the acetyl end groups (−COCH3), rather than from the elongation of the sulfur–gold
(S–Au) bonds at the tip-molecule interface.