Molecule-electrode contact atomic structures are a critical factor that
characterizes molecular devices, but their precise understanding and control
still remain elusive. Based on combined first-principles calculations and
single-molecule break junction experiments, we herein establish that the
conductance of alkanedithiolate junctions can both increase and decrease with
mechanical stretching and the specific trend is determined by the S-Au linkage
coordination number (CN) or the molecule-electrode contact atomic structure.
Specifically, we find that the mechanical pulling results in the conductance
increase for the junctions based on S-Au CN two and CN three contacts, while
the conductance is minimally affected by stretching for junctions with the CN
one contact and decreases upon the formation of Au monoatomic chains. Detailed
analysis unravels the mechanisms involving the competition between the
stretching-induced upshift of the highest occupied molecular orbital-related
states toward the Fermi level of electrodes and the deterioration of
molecule-electrode electronic couplings in different contact CN cases.
Moreover, we experimentally find a higher chance to observe the conductance
enhancement mode under a faster elongation speed, which is explained by ab
initio molecular dynamics simulations that reveal an important role of thermal
fluctuations in aiding deformations of contacts into low-coordination
configurations that include monoatomic Au chains. Pointing out the
insufficiency in previous notions of associating peak values in conductance
histograms with specific contact atomic structures, this work resolves the
controversy on the origins of ubiquitous multiple conductance peaks in
S-Au-based single-molecule junctions.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures; to be published in J. Am. Chem. So