Publication | Closed Access
The paradox of an insulating contact between a chemisorbed molecule and a wide band gap semiconductor surface
18
Citations
32
References
2011
Year
EngineeringChemistryElectronic PropertiesElectronic StructureCharge TransportSemiconductor NanostructuresSemiconductorsElectronic DevicesTunneling MicroscopyQuantum MaterialsChemisorbed MoleculeCharge Carrier TransportPhysicsSemiconductor MaterialPerylene MoleculeElectronic DecouplingElectronic MaterialsNatural SciencesSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter Physics
Controlling the intrinsic optical and electronic properties of a single molecule adsorbed on a surface requires electronic decoupling of some molecular orbitals from the surface states. Scanning tunneling microscopy experiments and density functional theory calculations are used to study a perylene molecule derivative (DHH-PTCDI), adsorbed on the clean 3 × 3 reconstructed wide band gap silicon carbide surface (SiC(0001)-3 × 3). We find that the LUMO of the adsorbed molecule is invisible in I(V) spectra due to the absence of any surface or bulk states and that the HOMO has a very low saturation current in I(z) spectra. These results present a paradox that the molecular orbitals are electronically isolated from the surface of the wide band gap semiconductor even though strong chemical bonds are formed.
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