When Electron Transfer
Meets Electron Transport in
Redox-Active Molecular Nanojunctions
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
A scanning electrochemical microscope (SECM) was used
to arrange
two microelectrodes face-to-face separated by a micrometric gap. Polyaniline
(PANI) was deposited electrochemically from the SECM tip side until
it bridged the two electrodes. The junctions obtained were characterized
by following the current through the PANI as a function of its electrochemical
potential measured versus a reference electrode acting as a gate electrode
in a solid-state transistor. PANI nanojunctions showed conductances
below 100 nS in the oxidized state, indicating control of the charge
transport within the whole micrometric gap by a limited number of
PANI wires. The SECM configuration makes it possible to observe in
the same experiment and in the same current range the electron-transfer
and electron-transport processes. These two phenomena are distinguished
here and characterized by following the variation of the current with
the bias voltage and the scan rate. The electron-transfer current
changes with the scan rate, while the charge-transport current varies
with the bias voltage. Finally, despite the initially micrometric
gap, a junction where the conductance is controlled by a single oligoaniline
strand is achieved