Charge transport through extended molecular wires with strongly correlated electrons

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Abstract

Electron-electron interactions are at the heart of chemistry and understanding how to control them is crucial for the development of molecular-scale electronic devices. Here, we investigate single-electron tunneling through a redox-active edge-fused porphyrin trimer and demonstrate that its transport behavior is well described by the Hubbard dimer model, providing insights into the role of electron-electron interactions in charge transport. In particular, we empirically determine the molecule's on-site and inter-site electron-electron repulsion energies, which are in good agreement with density functional calculations, and establish the molecular electronic structure within various oxidation states. The gate-dependent rectification behavior confirms the selection rules and state degeneracies deduced from the Hubbard model. We demonstrate that current flow through the molecule is governed by a non-trivial set of vibrationally coupled electronic transitions between various many-body ground and excited states, and experimentally confirm the importance of electron-electron interactions in single-molecule devices.

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Thomas, J. O., Sowa, J. K., Limburg, B., Bian, X., Evangeli, C., Swett, J. L., … Mol, J. A. (2021). Charge transport through extended molecular wires with strongly correlated electrons. Chemical Science, 12(33), 11121–11129. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1sc03050g

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