First-Principles Studies of Charge Dynamics in Single-Molecule Junctions at Finite Bias
ORAL
Abstract
Extending well-established measurements of low-bias conductance of single molecule junctions, new experiments report IV characteristics of organic molecules for biases as high as 1V [1]. Such measurements provide a unique probe of electronic properties of well-defined metal-organic nanointerfaces when driven out-of-equilibrium, and an opportunity to examine a still-missing quantitative theory of out-of-equilibrium charge dynamics at the nanoscale. Here we will present first-principles transport calculations for several amine-Au and pyridine-Au linked junctions at different levels of approximation: first mean-field, and then including electron-electron correlations at equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium. We show that incorporating electronic correlations at equilibrium already leads to a very good agreement with experiments [1], and discuss how these corrections might change out of equilibrium.\\[4pt] [1] Widawsky et al., Nanotechnology (2009).
–
Authors
-
Pierre Darancet
Molecular Foundry, LBNL
-
Hyoung Joon Choi
Department of Physics and IPAP, Yonsei University, Physics, Yonsei University
-
Jonathan R. Widawsky
Columbia University
-
Scott Berkley
Columbia University
-
Latha Venkataraman
Columbia University
-
Jeffrey B. Neaton
Molecular Foundry, LBNL, Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory