Electrostatically driven energy shift of molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine in carbon nanotube gaps
Abstract
The requirement for controllable frontier orbital energy shift in single-molecule devices based on electronic (tunneling) transport yielded several rules for device design that lean on molecular level pinning to the electrochemical potential of nano-electrodes. We previously found that the pinning (designated as the strong pinning) was the consequence of the bias-induced molecular charge accumulation related to the hybridization of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) with one of the electrodes. However, in the wide bias range, only "partial" pinning (designated as the weak pinning) happens. In this work, we address the bias-induced shift of molecular orbitals in a weak pinning regime, where no hybridization or covalent bonds with electrodes exist. We found using density functional theory coupled with non-equilibrium Green's functions that the energy shift of frontier molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine, placed between H-terminated (3, 3) CNTs, in weak pinning regime, i...s driven only by the electrostatic potential energy of an empty gap. For nicotine, whose HOMO and LUMO (lowest unoccupied molecular orbital) are located on different sides of the gap center, we show that the HOMO-LUMO energy gap changes with bias. We developed a theoretical model of a dielectric in a gap to depict this behavior. Application-wise, we expect that the weak pinning effect would be observable in novel single-molecule sensors based on electronic transport and molecular rectifying as long as the system exhibits a non-resonant behavior, and could serve for molecular gap tuning in single-molecule readout such as DNA, RNA and protein sequencing, or harmful single-molecule detection in gas phase.
Keywords:
Single-molecule / Molecular level pinning / Modeling and simulation / Electrostatic potential / Electronic transport / DFT plus NEGF / Carbon nanotubesSource:
Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 2021, 23, 1Publisher:
- Springer, Dordrecht
Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200053 (University of Belgrade, Institute for Multidisciplinary Research) (RS-200053)
- Swiss National Science Foundation (SCOPES project)Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) [152406]
- FP7-NMP, project acronym nanoDNAsequencing [GA214840]
DOI: 10.1007/s11051-021-05139-y
ISSN: 1388-0764
WoS: 000616413500010
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85100211702
Collections
Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Đurišić, Ivana AU - Dražić, Miloš AU - Tomović, Aleksandar AU - Jovanović, Vladimir AU - Žikić, Radomir PY - 2021 UR - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1412 AB - The requirement for controllable frontier orbital energy shift in single-molecule devices based on electronic (tunneling) transport yielded several rules for device design that lean on molecular level pinning to the electrochemical potential of nano-electrodes. We previously found that the pinning (designated as the strong pinning) was the consequence of the bias-induced molecular charge accumulation related to the hybridization of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) with one of the electrodes. However, in the wide bias range, only "partial" pinning (designated as the weak pinning) happens. In this work, we address the bias-induced shift of molecular orbitals in a weak pinning regime, where no hybridization or covalent bonds with electrodes exist. We found using density functional theory coupled with non-equilibrium Green's functions that the energy shift of frontier molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine, placed between H-terminated (3, 3) CNTs, in weak pinning regime, is driven only by the electrostatic potential energy of an empty gap. For nicotine, whose HOMO and LUMO (lowest unoccupied molecular orbital) are located on different sides of the gap center, we show that the HOMO-LUMO energy gap changes with bias. We developed a theoretical model of a dielectric in a gap to depict this behavior. Application-wise, we expect that the weak pinning effect would be observable in novel single-molecule sensors based on electronic transport and molecular rectifying as long as the system exhibits a non-resonant behavior, and could serve for molecular gap tuning in single-molecule readout such as DNA, RNA and protein sequencing, or harmful single-molecule detection in gas phase. PB - Springer, Dordrecht T2 - Journal of Nanoparticle Research T1 - Electrostatically driven energy shift of molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine in carbon nanotube gaps IS - 1 VL - 23 DO - 10.1007/s11051-021-05139-y ER -
@article{ author = "Đurišić, Ivana and Dražić, Miloš and Tomović, Aleksandar and Jovanović, Vladimir and Žikić, Radomir", year = "2021", abstract = "The requirement for controllable frontier orbital energy shift in single-molecule devices based on electronic (tunneling) transport yielded several rules for device design that lean on molecular level pinning to the electrochemical potential of nano-electrodes. We previously found that the pinning (designated as the strong pinning) was the consequence of the bias-induced molecular charge accumulation related to the hybridization of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) with one of the electrodes. However, in the wide bias range, only "partial" pinning (designated as the weak pinning) happens. In this work, we address the bias-induced shift of molecular orbitals in a weak pinning regime, where no hybridization or covalent bonds with electrodes exist. We found using density functional theory coupled with non-equilibrium Green's functions that the energy shift of frontier molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine, placed between H-terminated (3, 3) CNTs, in weak pinning regime, is driven only by the electrostatic potential energy of an empty gap. For nicotine, whose HOMO and LUMO (lowest unoccupied molecular orbital) are located on different sides of the gap center, we show that the HOMO-LUMO energy gap changes with bias. We developed a theoretical model of a dielectric in a gap to depict this behavior. Application-wise, we expect that the weak pinning effect would be observable in novel single-molecule sensors based on electronic transport and molecular rectifying as long as the system exhibits a non-resonant behavior, and could serve for molecular gap tuning in single-molecule readout such as DNA, RNA and protein sequencing, or harmful single-molecule detection in gas phase.", publisher = "Springer, Dordrecht", journal = "Journal of Nanoparticle Research", title = "Electrostatically driven energy shift of molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine in carbon nanotube gaps", number = "1", volume = "23", doi = "10.1007/s11051-021-05139-y" }
Đurišić, I., Dražić, M., Tomović, A., Jovanović, V.,& Žikić, R.. (2021). Electrostatically driven energy shift of molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine in carbon nanotube gaps. in Journal of Nanoparticle Research Springer, Dordrecht., 23(1). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11051-021-05139-y
Đurišić I, Dražić M, Tomović A, Jovanović V, Žikić R. Electrostatically driven energy shift of molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine in carbon nanotube gaps. in Journal of Nanoparticle Research. 2021;23(1). doi:10.1007/s11051-021-05139-y .
Đurišić, Ivana, Dražić, Miloš, Tomović, Aleksandar, Jovanović, Vladimir, Žikić, Radomir, "Electrostatically driven energy shift of molecular orbitals of benzene and nicotine in carbon nanotube gaps" in Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 23, no. 1 (2021), https://doi.org/10.1007/s11051-021-05139-y . .