posted on 2015-09-30, 00:00authored byTimothy
A. Su, Haixing Li, Vivian Zhang, Madhav Neupane, Arunabh Batra, Rebekka
S. Klausen, Bharat Kumar, Michael L. Steigerwald, Latha Venkataraman, Colin Nuckolls
While the electrical conductivity
of bulk-scale group 14 materials
such as diamond carbon, silicon, and germanium is well understood,
there is a gap in knowledge regarding the conductivity of these materials
at the nano and molecular scales. Filling this gap is important because
integrated circuits have shrunk so far that their active regions,
which rely so heavily on silicon and germanium, begin to resemble
ornate molecules rather than extended solids. Here we unveil a new
approach for synthesizing atomically discrete wires of germanium and
present the first conductance measurements of molecular germanium
using a scanning tunneling microscope-based break-junction (STM-BJ)
technique. Our findings show that germanium and silicon wires are
nearly identical in conductivity at the molecular scale, and that
both are much more conductive than aliphatic carbon. We demonstrate
that the strong donor ability of C–Ge σ-bonds can be
used to raise the energy of the anchor lone pair and increase conductance.
Furthermore, the oligogermane wires behave as conductance switches
that function through stereoelectronic logic. These devices
can be trained to operate with a higher switching factor by repeatedly
compressing and elongating the molecular junction.