What is it about?
We have investigated electronic transport in in a single-molecule junction composed of a biphenyl molecule attached to a p-doped semiconductor and metallic carbon nanotube leads (CNT zz8-bipheny-CNT zz9). We find that the IxV curve are asymmetric as a result of the different electronic natures of the right and left leads, which are metallic and semiconducting, respectively.
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Why is it important?
We provide an analysis of transition voltage spectroscopy (TVS) in such a system by means of both Fowler–Nordheim and Lauritsen–Millikan plots; this analysis allows one to identify the positions of resonances and the regions where the negative differential conductance occurs. We show that transmittance curves are well described by the Fano lineshape, for both direct and reverse bias, demonstrating that the frontier molecular orbitals are effectively involved in the transport process.
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This page is a summary of: Electronic transport, transition-voltage spectroscopy, and the Fano effect in single molecule junctions composed of a biphenyl molecule attached to metallic and semiconducting carbon nanotube electrodes, Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, January 2014, Royal Society of Chemistry,
DOI: 10.1039/c4cp00016a.
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