Abstract
We demonstrate in this joint experimental and theoretical study how one can alter electron transport behavior of a single melamine molecule adsorbed on a Cu (100) surface by performing a sequence of elegantly devised and well-controlled single molecular chemical processes. It is found that with a dehydrogenation reaction, the melamine molecule becomes firmly bonded onto the Cu surface and acts as a normal conductor controlled by elastic electron tunneling. A current-induced hydrogen tautomerization process results in an asymmetric melamine tautomer, which in turn leads to a significant rectifying effect. Furthermore, by switching on inelastic multielectron scattering processes, mechanical oscillations of an N-H bond between two configurations of the asymmetric tautomer can be triggered with tuneable frequency. Collectively, this designed molecule exhibits rectifying and switching functions simultaneously over a wide range of external voltage.
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Pan, S., Fu, Q., Huang, T., Zhao, A., Wang, B., Luo, Y., … Hou, J. (2009). Design and control of electron transport properties of single molecules. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(36), 15259–15263. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0903131106
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