Publication | Open Access
Tunneling rates in electron transport through double-barrier molecular junctions in a scanning tunneling microscope
105
Citations
35
References
2005
Year
Microscope TipEngineeringTunneling MicroscopyPhysicsMicroscopyNanotechnologyElectron MicroscopySurface ScienceApplied PhysicsScanning Probe MicroscopyElectron TransportElectron MicroscopeSingle MoleculeCharge Carrier TransportDouble-barrier Molecular JunctionsCharge TransportMagnesium Porphine Molecules
The scanning tunneling microscope enables atomic-scale measurements of electron transport through individual molecules. Copper phthalocyanine and magnesium porphine molecules adsorbed on a thin oxide film grown on the NiAl(110) surface were probed. The single-molecule junctions contained two tunneling barriers, vacuum gap, and oxide film. Differential conductance spectroscopy shows that electron transport occurs via vibronic states of the molecules. The intensity of spectral peaks corresponding to the individual vibronic states depends on the relative electron tunneling rates through the two barriers of the junction, as found by varying the vacuum gap tunneling rate by changing the height of the scanning tunneling microscope tip above the molecule. A simple, sequential tunneling model explains the observed trends.
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