Ionic Liquid Based Approach for Single-Molecule Electronics
with Cobalt Contacts
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Abstract
An electrochemical
method is presented for fabricating cobalt thin
films for single-molecule electrical transport measurements. These
films are electroplated in an aqueous electrolyte, but the crucial
stages of electrochemical reduction to remove surface oxide and adsorption
of alkane(di)thiol target molecules under electrochemical control
to form self-assembled monolayers which protect the oxide-free cobalt
surface are carried out in an ionic liquid. This approach yields monolayers
on Co that are of comparable quality to those formed on Au by standard
self-assembly protocols, as assessed by electrochemical methods and
surface infrared spectroscopy. Using an adapted scanning tunneling
microscopy (STM) method, we have determined the single-molecule conductance
of cobalt/1,8-octanedithiol/cobalt junctions by employing a monolayer
on cobalt and a cobalt STM tip in an ionic liquid environment and
have compared the results with those of experiments using gold electrodes
as a control. These cobalt substrates could therefore have future
application in organic spintronic devices such as magnetic tunnel
junctions