Nonmechanical Conductance
Switching in a Molecular
Tunnel Junction
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Abstract
We present a molecular junction composed of a donor (polyacetylene
strands) and an acceptor (malononitrile) connected together via a
benzene ring and coupled weakly to source and drain electrodes on
each side, for which a gate electrode induces intramolecular charge
transfer, switching reversibly the character of conductance. Using
a new brand of density functional theory, for which orbital energies
are similar to the quasiparticle energies, we show that the junction
displays a <i>single</i>, gate-tunable differential conductance
channel in a wide energy range. The gate field must align parallel
to the displacement vector between donors and acceptor to affect their
potential difference; for strong enough fields, spontaneous intramolecular
electron transfer occurs. This event radically affects conductance,
reversing the charge of carriers, enabling a spin-polarized current
channel. We discuss the physical principles controlling the operation
of the junction and find interplay of quantum interference,
charging, Coulomb blockade, and electron–hole binding energy
effects. We expect that this switching behavior is
a generic property for similar donor–acceptor systems of sufficient
stability