Room temperature conductance switching in a molecular iron(iii) spin crossover junction

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Abstract

Herein, we report the first room temperature switchable Fe(iii) molecular spin crossover (SCO) tunnel junction. The junction is constructed from [FeIII(qsal-I)2]NTf2(qsal-I = 4-iodo-2-[(8-quinolylimino)methyl]phenolate) molecules self-assembled on graphene surfaces with conductance switching of one order of magnitude associated with the high and low spin states of the SCO complex. Normalized conductance analysis of the current-voltage characteristics as a function of temperature reveals that charge transport across the SCO molecule is dominated by coherent tunnelling. Temperature-dependent X-ray absorption spectroscopy and density functional theory confirm the SCO complex retains its SCO functionality on the surface implying that van der Waals molecule—electrode interfaces provide a good trade-off between junction stability while retaining SCO switching capability. These results provide new insights and may aid in the design of other types of molecular devices based on SCO compounds.

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Karuppannan, S. K., Martín-Rodríguez, A., Ruiz, E., Harding, P., Harding, D. J., Yu, X., … Nijhuis, C. A. (2021). Room temperature conductance switching in a molecular iron(iii) spin crossover junction. Chemical Science, 12(7), 2381–2388. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0sc04555a

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