Charge Transport through Self-Assembled Monolayers of Compounds of Interest in Molecular Electronics

Abstract
The electrical properties of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on metal surfaces have been explored for a series of molecules to address the relation between the behavior of a molecule and its structure. We probed interfacial electron transfer processes, particularly those involving unoccupied states, of SAMs of thiolates or arylates on Au by using shear force-based scanning probe microscopy (SPM) combined with current−voltage (iV) and current−distance (id) measurements. The iV curves of hexadecanethiol in the low bias regime were symmetric around 0 V and the current increased exponentially with V at high bias voltage. Different than hexadecanethiol, reversible peak-shaped iV characteristics were obtained for most of the nitro-based oligo(phenylene ethynylene) SAMs studied here, indicating that part of the conduction mechanism of these junctions involved resonance tunneling. These reversible peaked iV curves, often described as a negative differential resistance (NDR) effect of the junction, can be used to define a threshold tip bias, VTH, for resonant conduction. We also found that for all of the SAMs studied here, the current decreased with increasing distance, d, between tip and substrate. The attenuation factor β of hexadecanethiol was high, ranging from 1.3 to 1.4 Å-1, and was nearly independent of the tip bias. The β-values for nitro-based molecules were low and depended strongly on the tip bias, ranging from 0.15 Å-1 for tetranitro oligo(phenylene ethynylene) thiol, VII, to 0.50 Å-1 for dinitro oligo(phenylene) thiol, VI, at a −3.0 V tip bias. Both the VTH and β values of these nitro-based SAMs were also strongly dependent on the structures of the molecules, e.g. the number of electroactive substituent groups on the central benzene, the molecular wire backbone, the anchoring linkage, and the headgroup. We also observed charge storage on nitro-based molecules. For a SAM of the dintro compound, V, ∼25% of charge collected in the negative scan is stored in the molecules and can be collected at positive voltages. A possible mechanism involving lateral electron hopping is proposed to explain this phenomenon.