Single Molecular Resistive Switch Obtained via Sliding
Multiple Anchoring Points and Varying Effective Wire Length
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
A single molecular resistive (conductance) switch via control of
anchoring positions was examined by using a molecule consisting of
more than two same anchors. For this purpose, we adopted the covered
quaterthiophene (QT)-based molecular wire junction. The QT-based wire
consisted of two thiophene ring anchors on each side; thus, shift
of anchors was potentially possible without a change in the binding
modes and distortion of the intramolecular structure. We observed
three distinct conductance states by using scanning tunneling microscope-based
break junction technique. A detailed analysis of the experimental
data and first-principles calculations revealed that the mechanism
of the resistive switch could be explained by standard length dependence
(exponential decay) of conductance. Here, the length is the distance
between the anchoring points, i.e., length of the bridged π-conjugated
backbone. Most importantly, this effective tunneling length was variable
via only controlling the anchoring positions in the same molecule.
Furthermore, we experimentally showed the possibility of a dynamic
switch of anchoring positions by mechanical control. The results suggested
a distinct strategy to design functional devices via contact engineering