1 research outputs found
Interface-Engineered Charge-Transport Properties in Benzenedithiol Molecular Electronic Junctions via Chemically p‑Doped Graphene Electrodes
In this study, we
fabricated and characterized vertical molecular junctions consisting
of self-assembled monolayers of benzenedithiol (BDT) with a p-doped
multilayer graphene electrode. The p-type doping of a graphene film
was performed by treating pristine graphene (work function of ∼4.40
eV) with trifluoromethanesulfonic (TFMS) acid, producing a significantly
increased work function (∼5.23 eV). The p-doped graphene–electrode
molecular junctions statistically showed an order of magnitude higher
current density and a lower charge injection barrier height than those
of the pristine graphene–electrode molecular junctions, as
a result of interface engineering. This enhancement is due to the
increased work function of the TFMS-treated p-doped graphene electrode
in the highest occupied molecular orbital-mediated tunneling molecular
junctions. The validity of these results was proven by a theoretical
analysis based on a coherent transport model that considers asymmetric
couplings at the electrode–molecule interfaces