643,099 research outputs found
Energy Level Alignment in Organic-Organic Heterojunctions: The TTF-TCNQ Interface
The energy level alignment of the two organic materials forming the TTF-TCNQ
interface is analyzed by means of a local orbital DFT calculation, including an
appropriate correction for the transport energy gaps associated with both
materials. These energy gaps are determined by a combination of some
experimental data and the results of our calculations for the difference
between the TTF_{HOMO} and the TCNQ_{LUMO} levels. We find that the interface
is metallic, as predicted by recent experiments, due to the overlap (and charge
transfer) between the Density of States corresponding to these two levels,
indicating that the main mechanism controlling the TTF-TCNQ energy level
alignment is the charge transfer between the two materials. We find an induced
interface dipole of 0.7 eV in good agreement with the experimental evidence. We
have also analyzed the electronic properties of the TTF-TCNQ interface as a
function of an external bias voltage \Delta, between the TCNQ and TTF crystals,
finding a transition between metallic and insulator behavior for \Delta~0.5 eV
Dynamical Image Charge Effect in Molecular Tunnel Junctions: Beyond Energy Level Alignment
When an electron tunnels between two metal contacts it temporarily induces an
image charge (IC) in the electrodes which acts back on the tunneling electron.
It is usually assumed that the IC forms instantaneously such that a static
model for the image potential applies. Here we investigate how the finite IC
formation time affects charge transport through a molecule suspended between
two electrodes. For a single level model, an analytical treatment shows that
the conductance is suppressed by a factor (compared to the static IC
approximation) where is the quasiparticle renormalization factor. We show
that can be expressed either in terms of the plasma frequency of the
electrode or as the overlap between the ground states of the electrode with and
without an electron on the molecule. First-principles GW calculations for
benzene-diamine connected to gold electrodes show that the dynamical
corrections can reduce the conductance by more than a factor of two.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Constrained-DFT method for accurate energy level alignment of metal/molecule interfaces
We present a computational scheme for extracting the energy level alignment
of a metal/molecule interface, based on constrained density functional theory
and local exchange and correlation functionals. The method, applied here to
benzene on Li(100), allows us to evaluate charge transfer energies, as well as
the spatial distribution of the image charge induced on the metal surface. We
systematically study the energies for charge transfer from the molecule to the
substrate as function of the molecule-substrate distance, and investigate the
effects arising from image charge confinement and local charge neutrality
violation. For benzene on Li(100) we find that the image charge plane is
located at about 1.8 \AA above the Li surface, and that our calculated charge
transfer energies compare perfectly with those obtained with a classical
electrostatic model having the image plane located at the same position. The
methodology outlined here can be applied to study any metal/organic interface
in the weak coupling limit at the computational cost of a total energy
calculation. Most importantly, as the scheme is based on total energies and not
on correcting the Kohn-Sham quasiparticle spectrum, accurate results can be
obtained with local/semi-local exchange and correlation functionals. This
enables a systematic approach to convergence
Magnetization dependent current rectification in (Ga,Mn)As magnetic tunnel junctions
We have found that the current rectification effect in triple layer (double
barrier) (Ga,Mn)As magnetic tunnel junctions strongly depends on the
magnetization alignment. The direction as well as the amplitude of the
rectification changes with the alignment, which can be switched by
bi-directional spin-injection with very small threshold currents. A possible
origin of the rectification is energy dependence of the density of states
around the Fermi level. Tunneling density of states in (Ga,Mn)As shows
characteristic dip around zero-bias indicating formation of correlation gap,
the asymmetry of which would be a potential source of the energy dependent
density of states
Charge transport across metal/molecular (alkyl) monolayer-Si junctions is dominated by the LUMO level
We compare the charge transport characteristics of heavy doped p- and
n-Si-alkyl chain/Hg junctions. Photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS, IPES and XPS)
results for the molecule-Si band alignment at equilibrium show the Fermi level
to LUMO energy difference to be much smaller than the corresponding Fermi level
to HOMO one. This result supports the conclusion we reach, based on negative
differential resistance in an analogous semiconductor-inorganic insulator/metal
junction, that for both p- and n-type junctions the energy difference between
the Fermi level and LUMO, i.e., electron tunneling, controls charge transport.
The Fermi level-LUMO energy difference, experimentally determined by IPES,
agrees with the non-resonant tunneling barrier height deduced from the
exponential length-attenuation of the current
Reliable energy level alignment at physisorbed molecule-metal interfaces from density functional theory.
A key quantity for molecule-metal interfaces is the energy level alignment of molecular electronic states with the metallic Fermi level. We develop and apply an efficient theoretical method, based on density functional theory (DFT) that can yield quantitatively accurate energy level alignment information for physisorbed metal-molecule interfaces. The method builds on the "DFT+Σ" approach, grounded in many-body perturbation theory, which introduces an approximate electron self-energy that corrects the level alignment obtained from conventional DFT for missing exchange and correlation effects associated with the gas-phase molecule and substrate polarization. Here, we extend the DFT+Σ approach in two important ways: first, we employ optimally tuned range-separated hybrid functionals to compute the gas-phase term, rather than rely on GW or total energy differences as in prior work; second, we use a nonclassical DFT-determined image-charge plane of the metallic surface to compute the substrate polarization term, rather than the classical DFT-derived image plane used previously. We validate this new approach by a detailed comparison with experimental and theoretical reference data for several prototypical molecule-metal interfaces, where excellent agreement with experiment is achieved: benzene on graphite (0001), and 1,4-benzenediamine, Cu-phthalocyanine, and 3,4,9,10-perylene-tetracarboxylic-dianhydride on Au(111). In particular, we show that the method correctly captures level alignment trends across chemical systems and that it retains its accuracy even for molecules for which conventional DFT suffers from severe self-interaction errors
Energy Level Alignment at Molecule-Metal Interfaces from an Optimally-Tuned Range-Separated Hybrid Functional
The alignment of the frontier orbital energies of an adsorbed molecule with
the substrate Fermi level at metal-organic interfaces is a fundamental
observable of significant practical importance in nanoscience and beyond.
Typical density functional theory calculations, especially those using local
and semi-local functionals, often underestimate level alignment leading to
inaccurate electronic structure and charge transport properties. In this work,
we develop a new fully self-consistent predictive scheme to accurately compute
level alignment at certain classes of complex heterogeneous molecule-metal
interfaces based on optimally-tuned range-separated hybrid functionals.
Starting from a highly accurate description of the gas-phase electronic
structure, our method by construction captures important nonlocal surface
polarization effects via tuning of the long-range screened exchange in a
range-separated hybrid in a non-empirical and system-specific manner. We
implement this functional in a plane-wave code and apply it to several
physisorbed and chemisorbed molecule-metal interface systems. Our results are
in quantitative agreement with experiments, both the level alignment and work
function changes. Our approach constitutes a new practical scheme for accurate
and efficient calculations of the electronic structure of molecule-metal
interfaces.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
- …
