Bangyao
Wu
,
Weiyi
Guo
,
Jianming
An
and
Haixing
Li
*
Department of Physics, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon 999077, Hong Kong, P. R. China. E-mail: haixinli@cityu.edu.hk
First published on 6th June 2022
pH plays a fundamental role in regulating various processes occurring in ecosystems, biological organisms, and chemistry laboratories, and lately, has been observed to drastically impact material electronic properties at the single molecule level. The use of pH represents one route both to investigate the fundamental charge transport processes at nanoscale junctions and to create new electronic device functions. In this review, we describe how pH affects and controls the conductance of various single molecule junctions, their underlying mechanisms and technological implications, and how such rules of pH–property relationship need to be further developed so we can ultimately use pH as a routine method to control single molecule conductance.
Regulating charge transport across a molecule bridged between two electrodes is essential for developing functional molecular circuits. Towards this goal, stimuli such as light,16 electrochemical gating,17 and mechanical modulation18 have been applied for tuning the transport characteristics of metal–molecule–metal junctions. Among different approaches, pH emerges as a new tool for reversibly modulating molecular conductance, and moreover, it provides a new aspect for our understanding of the single molecule electronic properties. pH, a quantification of the concentration of hydrogen ions (or protons) in a solution, can be controlled during single molecule measurements. By designing target molecules that can be protonated by accepting protons or deprotonated by losing protons under the corresponding conditions, we can probe how such processes affect single molecule transport properties. There are three parts of the target molecule that can respond to pH: linker group, side group, and molecular backbone (Fig. 1 left). For example, carboxyl linker group becomes deprotonated under a basic condition, and amine side group as well as pyridine backbone become protonated under an acidic condition (Fig. 1 right). These types of chemical structure changes may alter the molecular orbitals, the orbital energy positions relative to the Fermi level of the electrodes, and the binding strength and geometry of the molecular junction, which ultimately impact the conductance. Revealing the connections between pH and the chemical and electrical properties of molecules has become an important subject in molecular electronics.
This perspective provides a summary of our current understanding of how protonation and deprotonation profoundly impact the charge transport characteristics of single-molecule junctions, emphasizing the versatile regulatory role of pH in molecular devices. Section 2 provides a brief description of the experimental methods for applying a pH control in molecular conductance measurements. Section 3 is focused on molecular backbones, specifically the organic π-conjugated and heteroatomic backbones that can respond to pH. Discussions about amine and carboxyl groups in response to pH regulation are provided in Section 4 (as linker group) and 5 (in peptides). Section 6 is focused on pH control of the conductance of imidazole when used as a linker group and as a backbone component. Section 7 is focused on the pyrazole unit as an anchor group that can modulate molecular conductance under a pH control. Section 8 is devoted to supramolecular complexes and how pH can affect their conductance. Section 9 is devoted to conductance control by Lewis-acid base interactions. Section 10 is focused on light, and Section 11 is focused on electrochemical gating; both are external stimuli combined with pH for tuning the conductance of molecular junctions. A brief conclusion and outlook appear in Section 12.
STM-BJ measurements are carried out as follows. First, the STM tip is gradually brought into the substrate until it makes a hard contact, which is usually above a few conductance quanta, where conductance quantum (G0 = 2e2/h = 77.5 μS) is a frequently used conductance unit. Then the tip is withdrawn from the substrate while the conductance is simultaneously recorded as a function of the tip-substrate displacement. When the separation between the tip and the substrate becomes large enough, a molecule in proximity can bridge this gap to form an Au–molecule–Au junction. In the conductance trace, plateaus below 1 G0 signify the formation of such molecular junctions. Finally, as the tip continues to be withdrawn, molecular junction ruptures and conductance drops to the noise floor. The binding geometry of the molecule, as well as the configuration of the atomic surface of the electrode, can all vary from junction to junction, resulting in a different conductance trajectory in each measurement. Thus, thousands of measured trajectories are compiled into a one- or two-dimension (1D or 2D) conductance histogram to determine the most probable conductance of a single molecule junction.
Several studies have reported the use of pH as an external control for tuning the electronic properties of molecular junctions, and their methods are summarized in Table 1. Non-reducing strong inorganic acids such as HClO4, HCl, and H2SO4, as well as strong base NaOH are stable in most systems and do not disrupt the structure of target molecules, thus were commonly used in aqueous solutions as the acid and base reagent for conductance measurement of target molecules such as alkanes, imidazoles, and pyridines (# 1–6 in Table 1). Weak base buffering agent 2-(cyclohexylamino) ethanesulfonic acid (CHES), K2HPO4/KH2PO4, Na2HPO4/NaH2PO4, NaHCO3/Na2CO3, and NaOAc were used in aqueous solutions for increasing pH during the conductance measurement (# 7–10 in Table 1). Besides, organic acids such as trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) and camphorsulfonic acid (CSA), and base triethylamine were used for protonating and deprotonating target molecules, respectively, in measurements performed with organic solvent (# 11–15 in Table 1). In addition, supplying acidic or basic solution vapor to the molecular junctions can also tune the pH during the measurement. This method allows a different solvent to be used in preparing the molecular solution than that used for the acid/base solution (# 16 in Table 1). Conductance measurements have also been performed using monolayer Langmuir–Blodgett (LB) films and mixed self-assembled monolayers (SAM) where pH was controlled (# 16–19 in Table 1). In addition to the general pH regulation methods, Lewis acid–base interactions can be seen as a special case, in which Lewis acid is an electron acceptor and Lewis base is an electron donor. For example, fluoride (Lewis base) and organoborane (Lewis acid) were shown to undergo Lewis acid–base interaction, leading to a change in the molecular conductance of organoborane wire.24
No. | Target molecule of the measurement | pH | Solvent | Acid and/or base | Measurement methoda | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Au electrodes were used unless specified. b Na2CO3 aqueous solution was mixed with TCB solution for increasing the pH, and the organic phase was separated in order to be used in the conductance measurements. c Spiropyran is a photoacid that undergoes photoinduced proton transfer with the target molecule during the measurement. Spiropyran and an equal amount of TFA were supplemented in the molecular solution for the measurement. d No solvent was present when conductance measurements were performed on these SAMs. Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and tetrahydrofuran/chloroform (1:4, v/v) were used as the solvent for preparing the SAMs in # 16 and # 17, respectively. e Monolayer Langmuir–Blodgett (LB) film was assembled by using a molecular solution prepared in organic solvent mixture, and subphases were pure water (pH = 5.6) or aqueous NaOH solution (pH = 11.0). The monolayer LB film was transferred onto Au-on-glass substrates for the conductance measurements. | ||||||
1 | Malachite green and pararosaniline | 5.5, 13.6 | H2O | HClO4 and NaOH | STM-BJ | 25 |
2 | Diamine butane | 1, 10, 13 | H2O | HClO4 and NaOH | STM-BJ | 43 |
3 | Dicarboxylic-acid butane | 1, 5, 13 | H2O | HClO4 and NaOH | STM-BJ | 43 |
4 | 4,4′-Bipyridine | 1.0, 4.1, 10.0 | H2O | HClO4, KClO4, and NaOH | STM-BJ with electrochemical gate | 80 |
5 | Imidazole | 3, 7, 9, 12 | H2O | HCl and NaOH | STM-BJ | 54 |
6 | 4,4′-Vinylenedipyridine | 2.35, 2.57, 2.85, 3.01, 3.26, 3.53 | H2O | H2SO4 and Na2SO4 | STM-BJ with Ni electrodes and electrochemical gate | 81 |
7 | Peptides | 1.5, 7.4, 13 | H2O | HClO4, NaClO4, NaOAc, NaHCO3, Na2CO3, and NaOH | STM-BJ | 12 |
8 | Cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]) and melphalan@CB[7] complex | 1, 4, 7, 9 | H2O | HCl, Na2HPO4, NaH2PO4, and NaOH | STM fixed junction technique | 64 |
9 | Peptides | 2, 6.9 | H2O | HClO4, K2HPO4, and KH2PO4 | STM I(s) technique | 47 |
10 | Peptides | 9 | H2O | 2-(Cyclohexylamino) ethanesulfonic acid (CHES) | STM-BJ | 46 |
11 | Azulene derivatives | No details | Tetrahydrofuran/mesitylene (1:4, v/v) | Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) | MCBJ | 27 |
12 | Diketopyrrolopyrrole derivatives | No details | Chloroform/mesitylene (1:4, v/v) | Camphorsulfonic acid (CSA) and triethylamine | MCBJ | 35 |
13 | Pyridine derivatives | No details | 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene (TCB) | TFA and Na2CO3 aqueous solutionb | STM-BJ | 40 |
14 | Spiropyran derivatives | No details | Mesitylene/dicholoromethane (10:1, v/v) | TFA and triethylamine | STM-BJ | 70 |
15 | Azulene derivatives | No details | Tetrahydrofuran/mesitylene (1:4, v/v) | TFA and spiropyranc | MCBJ with light control | 71 |
16 | Benzo-bis(imidazole) derivatives | No details | —d | HCl solution vapor and triethylamine vapor | SAMs with PtIr coated tip, c-AFM method | 53 |
17 | Pyrazole derivatives | 5.6, 11.0 | — | NaOH aqueous solutione | LB thin film, touch to contact (TTC) STM method | 57 |
18 | Pyrimidine derivatives | No details | — | HClO4 and NaOEt | Mixed SAMs with AuNPs immobilized on top, PtIr STM tip, scanning tunnelling spectroscopy (STS) method | 30 |
19 | Spiropyran derivatives | No details | — | Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid and triethylamine | Mixed SAMs, EGaIn junction method, light control | 72 |
Fig. 2 (a) Chemical structures and photographs of a solution of malachite green (MG) at pH = 5.5 and pH = 13.6. (b) pH-induced conductance switching of MG between “ON” and “OFF” states. (c) Calculated transmission spectra for Au–MG–Au junctions at pH = 5.5 and pH = 13.6 (EF = −3.35 eV). (d) Left: Protonation of azulene in the presence of TFA. Right: Structure and conductance values determined from MCBJ measurements for 1,3Az, 4,7Az, and 5,7Az. (e and f) Calculated conductance for 1,3AZ, 4,7Az, and 5,7Az junctions at the (e) initial and (f) protonated state. (a–c) are adapted with permission from ref. 25, copyright (2014) Wiley. (d–f) are adapted with permission from ref. 27, copyright (2017) Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Azulene (C10H8) is an all-carbon π-conjugated dye molecule, exhibiting an electron-rich five-membered ring and an electron-poor seven-membered ring. This ring system of azulene becomes protonated in the presence of acid and forms a stable azulenium cation (Fig. 2d, left).26 Yang et al. synthesized three azulene derivatives (1,3Az, 4,7Az, and 5,7Az, structures see Fig. 2d) where the seven-membered or five-membered ring was directly incorporated into the backbone and performed conductance measurements using the MCBJ technique.27 All derivatives showed an increase in conductance upon protonation, among which 5,7Az displayed the largest increase (Fig. 2d). The authors applied a parameter-free theory28 to evaluate the correlation between conductance enhancement and the connecting positions of azulene with the rest of the molecule. The calculated conductance suggested that protonation led to separation in the spin-up and spin-down energy levels of azulene and resulted in a smaller HOMO–LUMO gap compared to the initial one for the neutral state. Notably, the initial 5,7Az showed destructive quantum interference near EF (0 eV) (green curve in Fig. 2e), and when 5,7Az became protonated, this anti-resonance valley disappeared (green curve in Fig. 2f); 1,3Az and 4,7Az did not show quantum interference features in either neutral or protonated state (red and blue curves, Fig. 2e and f). Therefore, while all derivatives showed a conductance enhancement upon protonation, 5,7Az demonstrated the highest. This result suggested that protonation can be used as a novel strategy to modulate quantum interference effect in charge transport through single molecule junctions.
Fig. 3 (a) Schematic of molecular junction of 1. (b) Protonated and deprotonated structure of 2 and their corresponding conductance states. (c) Chemical structure of SDPP and SPPO. Resonance structure for SPPO-H+. (d and e) Conductance histograms of (d) SDPP and SPPO, and (e) SPPO-H+ and SDPP-CAS. (f) Transmission spectra for molecular junctions formed with SDPP, SPPO and SPPO-H+. (a) is reprinted with permission from ref. 30, copyright (2005) American Chemical Society. (b) is reprinted with permission from ref. 33, copyright (2006) AAAS. (d–f) are adapted with permission from ref. 35, copyright (2018) American Chemical Society. |
In addition to the rectification inversion phenomenon, conductance switching with pH has also been observed for nitrogen-containing heteroatomic backbone-based molecules. In 2006, Guo et al. reported a single-molecule switch controlled by pH using an oligoaniline derivative 2 (structure see Fig. 3b) and single-walled carbon nanotube electrodes.33 The conductance of the oxidized emeraldine form of 2 at pH = 11 was an order of magnitude lower than that at pH = 3 due to the deprotonation of nitrogen atoms (Fig. 3b). Later, Cao et al. carried out experiments on azobenzene-based molecules attached to graphene electrodes and obtained similar results due to the presence of sulfonic acid substitution groups that respond to pH.34 In this study, the conductance of the azobene-based molecule increased by two orders of magnitude at low pH = 1 (protonated state) compared to that measured at high pH = 12 (deprotonated state).
Compounds containing a diketopyrrolopyrrole unit have also been shown to undergo conductance switching events with pH, as described in the study of two diketopyrrolopyrroke isomers: SDPP and SPPO (structures see Fig. 3c) in Zhang et al.35SDPP had alkyl substitutions on two nitrogen atoms, whereas one of the nitrogen atoms was free in SPPO and could be protonated in an acidic environment. The conductance measurements showed that SDPP in the presence of camphorsulfonic acid (CAS), labelled as SDPP-CAS, had a slightly higher conductance than that of SDPP (Fig. 3d and e). In contrast, when CAS was added to SPPO to form the protonated SPPO-H+, its conductance dropped dramatically (Fig. 3d and e). We note that these trends were not the same as the results discussed above of protonation-induced increase in conductance for dye molecules (MG and PA), azulene derivatives (1,3Az, 4,7Az, and 5,7Az), and oligoaniline derivative (2). The authors analyzed all possible structures of these isomers and revealed that the dominant structure for SPPO-H+ was the cross-conjugated structure, as illustrated in the right panel of Fig. 3c. The transmission calculations showed a destructive quantum interference effect in the SPPO-H+ junction, but not in SDPP or SPPO junctions (Fig. 3f), agreeing with previous works that had shown that cross-conjugated structures exhibit destructive quantum interference effect.36–38 Taken together, the destructive interference feature combined with the lower HOMO and LUMO energy levels of SPPO-H+ explained the suppressed conductance observed for SPPO-H+ under protonation. These findings for the first time demonstrated experimentally that protonation could induce destructive quantum interference, suggesting pH as an easy and efficient approach for manipulating frontier molecular orbitals and controlling molecular conductance.
Another nitrogen-containing functional group is pyridine, which is often used for constructing single molecule wires. 4,4′-bipyridine has been shown to exhibit two conductance states and was realized into a mechanically controlled single molecule switch.18,39 In addition, pyridines can undergo protonation process under acidic conditions and became of interest for conductance studies under pH regulation. Specifically, pyridines selectively interact with protons to form pyridiniums, and a series of pyridine-based molecular backbones were studied by STM-BJ technique in the work of Tang et al.40 One of the compounds studied was M3, structure of which is shown in Fig. 4a. M3 could undergo a protonation reaction in the presence of TFA to form M3-H, and the initial M3 state could be re-formed when Na2CO3 aqueous solution treatment was applied. M3-H showed an enhanced conductance of 10−3.90G0 in comparison to the 10−5.10G0 for M3. The authors applied the flicker noise analysis to these two compounds and showed that M3 junctions conducted electrons primarily through-space while M3-H conducted electrons predominately through-bond (Fig. 4b). This result highlighted that pH could tune the transport mechanism between through-space and through-bond, presenting a new property that could be regulated by pH.
Fig. 4 (a) Chemical structure of M3 and its protonated form M3-H. (b) 2D histograms of the flicker noise power versus average conductance for M3 and M3-H. (c) Tight-binding model calculations of frontier molecular orbitals of meta-connected molecular core with (εp ≠ 0) and without (εp = 0) a heteroatom. (d) Calculations of the transmission probability of M3 with different site energies of nitrogen atom (εp). A molecular structure for the calculation is shown on the top left with red lines at both ends representing 1D leads. A zoom-in of the LUMO orbital positions is provided on the top right. (a–d) are reprinted with permission from ref. 40, copyright (2021) American Chemical Society. |
To further rationalize this phenomenon, authors used tight-binding model with a parameter εp, which represented the perturbation energy on the nitrogen (indicated in green in Fig. 4c), to computationally evaluate how the molecular orbitals of a model structure of M3 were affected by the presence (εp ≠ 0) or absence (εp = 0) of a heteroatom. When εp was varied from 0 to −0.5, LUMO+1 moved down below LUMO, forming an inversion of the LUMO and LUMO+1 level, as illustrated in Fig. 4c. This led to a switch of the quantum interference pattern from destructive to constructive interference. This type of phenomenon has been observed theoretically in other systems. For example, calculations have shown that HOMO and HOMO−1 inversions were associated with the appearance of destructive quantum interference in permethylated oligosilanes, which occurred when the dihedral angles of the internal Si–Si–Si–Si was varied from 90° to 0°.11 Next, transmission calculations of M3 connected to two 1D leads were carried out where site energy for nitrogen was decreased from 0 to −0.3, and the calculations revealed that the anti-resonance character of the destructive quantum interference disappeared at εp = −0.225 or lower values (Fig. 4d). The authors concluded that the protonation effect in the measurement could be modelled as a negative site energy on the nitrogen atom, therefore the calculated result of the disappearance of the quantum interference explained the observed increase in conductance.
Fig. 5 Conductance histograms of (a) diamine butane and (b) dicarboxylic-acid butane measured at pH = 1 (green shaded area), 10 for diamine butane and 5 for dicarboxylic-acid butane (orange line), and 13 (purple shaded area or line). (a and b) are adapted with permission from ref. 43, copyright (2006) American Chemical Society. |
Fig. 5b shows the conductance histograms of dicarboxylic-acid butane measured at pH = 1, 5, and 13. Like amine-terminated butane, dicarboxylic-acid butane also showed a pH-dependent conductance. When pH = 1, a weak peak located at 1.5 × 10−4G0 (green area) indicated that protonated –COOH groups could interact with Au electrodes to some degree, which was attributed to the lone pair of electrons on the oxygen atoms.44 We note that in a previous work by Ahn et al. no identifiable conductance signature was observed for 4-(methylthio)benzoic acid in an acidic solution (pH of 1–3), which was explained by the reduced solubility of 4-(methylthio)benzoic acid in the solution of such low pH or by the fact that 4-(methylthio)benzoic acid was protonated in strongly acidic solution.45 The different behaviors between dicarboxylic-acid butane and 4-(methylthio)benzoic acid suggest that the solubility of the molecule, molecular length, and/or backbone structure might influence the binding of carboxyl-terminated molecules to Au under strongly acidic conditions. The pK1 and pK2 of dicarboxylic-acid butane were measured to be 4.42 and 5.41, respectively.43 Thus, when pH was increased to 5, both –COOH and –COO− existed in the solution as one of the anchoring groups –COOH was possibly deprotonated to –COO− with a negative charge conjugated between the two equal O atoms. A negative charge could enhance the electronegativity of the O atom, thereby increasing the strength of the O–Au bond. Indeed, at pH = 5, the authors observed a conductance peak located at 2.7 × 10−4G0 (orange line), nearly twice of the conductance measured at pH = 1, confirming their hypothesis. Finally, at pH = 13, both anchoring groups likely became deprotonated, and a more intense conductance peak located at 2.7 × 10−4G0 (purple line) was observed, suggesting a more frequent binding between the molecule and the Au electrodes. This pH-dependent conductance study of amine- and carboxyl-terminated alkanes highlighted the important role that pH plays in regulating both the formation of the molecular junction and the junction conductance through a protonation and deprotonation process of the anchoring groups.
Fig. 6 (a) Conductance versus pH plots and chemical structures for peptides 1, 2 and 3. The blue solid lines are guide for the eye. (b) Chemical structure for H(EL)5C. (c) Conductance histograms for H(EL)5C at pH = 6.9 (dark red) and pH =2 (light red) using I(s) technique in an STM method. (d) A schematic diagram of molecular configuration change for H(EL)5C during the pH regulation. (a) is adapted with permission from ref. 12, copyright (2004) American Chemical Society. (c and d) are reprinted with permission from ref. 47, copyright (2011) American Chemical Society. |
The authors observed a greater conductance change with pH for peptide 1 than those observed for peptide 2 and 3, likely due to the fact that among the three, amine group occupied the largest fraction of the molecule in peptide 1. In addition, peptide 1 and 2 showed a steeper conductance drop from pH = 5 to pH = 8 in comparison to that of peptide 3; the authors reasoned that this difference possibly came from the pH response of the carboxyl group on peptide 3. Carboxyl group COOH on peptide 3 likely became deprotonated to form COO− when pH was increased, thus affecting the overall conductance of peptide 3. Since the pH at which the deprotonation process occurs is different for –NH3+ and –COOH, the conductance change of peptide 3 was occurring over a wider pH range than that observed for peptide 1 and 2.
In a later study, Scullion et al. designed a peptide H(EL)5C, where H stands for histidine, E for glutamic acid, L for leucine, and C for cysteine; its chemical structure is shown in Fig. 6b.47 STM-based method with I(s) technique was used to measure the single molecule conductance of Au–H(EL)5C–Au junctions. Different from the study described above, unmodified histidine and cysteine were used as linkers to attach the molecule to the Au surface. The authors observed a well-defined conductance peak at 1.7 nS for H(EL)5C at pH = 2, and a significantly lower conductance below 0.10 nS when the pH was increased to 6.9 (Fig. 6c). The peptides within these monolayers existed as α-helices at pH ∼ 2 while deprotonation of the carboxyl groups in the glutamic acid residues led to a more extended conformation of the peptide at pH ∼ 7 (Fig. 6d) and substantially suppressed electron transport across the molecular film. When multiple groups were negatively charged, the charges on each group repelled each other and disrupted the original folding of the peptide. Such unfolding of the peptide increased its junction length and decreased its single-molecule conductance.
Fig. 7 (a) Upper: Chemical structure of imidazole under neutral and basic conditions. Lower: 1D conductance histograms for imidazole junctions measured under pH of 3, 7, 9, or 12, respectively. (b and c) Upper: DFT-optimized structure of a chain of imidazoles formed through hydrogen bonding in (b) Milli-Q water and (c) an anhydrous environment. Lower: 1D conductance histogram of imidazole measured in (b) Milli-Q water and (c) an anhydrous environment. (d) Protonation process for 3 and 4 under acidic condition. (e) Plot of the log mean current for 3 and 4 during three successive acidic and basic cycles. Current was determined from a fitted log-normal distribution to the current histograms measured by C-AFM at 200 mV. (a) is reprinted with permission from ref. 54, copyright (2020) American Chemical Society. (b and c) are reprinted with permission from ref. 55, copyright (2020) Royal Society of Chemistry. (e) is reprinted with permission from ref. 53, copyright (2020) Royal Society of Chemistry. |
In the same year, Audi et al. reported a conductance study of benzo-bis(imidazole) derivatives 3 and 4 (structures see Fig. 7d) where imidazole was part of the molecular backbone, and demonstrated how pH regulation on molecular conductance was affected by side chain chemistry.53 Both aniline-substituted 3 and H-substituted 4 could undergo protonation processes in the presence of acid, as shown in Fig. 7d. The authors used conductive atomic force microscopy (C-AFM) to measure the current–voltage characteristics of 3 and 4. Interestingly, the opposite conductance trend was observed in these two molecules under acidic and basic conditions: the conductance of 3 increased when 3 switched from the protonated state to the neutral state, whereas the conductance of 4 decreased when the same deprotonation process occurred (Fig. 7e). DFT calculations showed that protonation decreased the HOMO–LUMO gap in both molecules, and the observed opposite change in conductance upon protonation was rationalized to be a result of the different position of the HOMO level in these two molecules that led to the different transmission probabilities at the Fermi energy level. We note that imidazole is among the few that has been extensively investigated both as an anchor group and as the backbone for its electronic properties under different pH values.
Fig. 8 (a) Deprotonation process of 5 in the presence of Au. (b) Single molecule break junction traces of 5 showing peak-like shape events. (c) 1H NMR spectra of 3,5-dimethylpyrazole (blue line), uncapped Au nanoparticles (red line), and a mixture of 3,5-dimethylpyrazole and uncapped Au nanoparticles (green line). (d) Averaged I–V curves for LB film of 5 measured using a TTC method under pH = 5.6 and 11.0. (e) Table of single molecule and monolayer conductance experimentally determined for 5, and its thiophene-, pyridine-, aniline-, and benzoic acid-terminated analogs. (b and c) are adapted with permission from ref. 56, copyright (2018) American Chemical Society. (d) is reprinted with permission from ref. 57, copyright (2021) Royal Society of Chemistry. |
A comparison of single molecule conductance and monolayer conductance of 5 to those of its analogs where the binding group pyrazole is replaced by thiophene,59 pyridine,60 aniline,61 or benzoic acid group62 is shown in Fig. 8e for further understanding the impact of the deprotonation process of pyrazole on the molecular conductance. For both single molecule and monolayer measurements, an order of magnitude higher conductance was observed for pyrazole-terminated 5 in comparison to those of other molecules in Fig. 8e with similar molecular lengths. Specifically, DFT calculations of thiophene-,59 aniline-,61 and pyrazole-terminated compounds had corroborated this experimental observation in single molecule conductance measurements.63 DFT calculations indicated that the higher conductance of pyrazole-linked junctions likely resulted from a closer alignment between frontier orbitals of the molecule and the Fermi level of Au for deprotonated pyrazole-terminated compounds compared to the aniline- and thiophene-terminated ones. These features made pyrazole a promising molecular anchor group to be incorporated into molecular materials for transport mechanism studies.
This comparison in Fig. 8e also shows that the monolayer conductance of benzoic acid-terminated compounds is pH dependent.62 The authors suggested that the deprotonation of –COOH into –COO− can lead to two effects: an increase of occupied area for each molecule in LB films, and a more tilted arrangement of the molecules on the gold substrate. These effects, accompanied by the reduced hydrogen-bonding between the molecules due to the –COO–Au linkage, resulted in an increased monolayer conductance in deprotonated LB sample. Taken together with our discussions in Section 4, although the measurement details of the LB film and single molecule junctions were different, both followed the same trend that protonation increases the molecular conductance for carboxylic acid-terminated compounds.
Fig. 9 (a) Chemical structures for CB[7] and Mel. (b) Single molecule conductance for CB[7] and Mel@CB[7] measured in phosphate buffer (PB) or organic TCB solvent under different pH values. (a and b) are reprinted with permission from ref. 64, copyright (2020) Frontiers Media S.A. |
Fig. 10 (a) A schematic diagram of single molecule junctions formed with 6 and 6·2F. (b) 1D conductance histograms and (c) DFT transmission coefficients of 6 (blue) and 6·2F (red). (a–c) are reprinted with permission from ref. 24, copyright (2018) Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Fig. 11 (a) Chemical structure of MC-H-1, SP-1, and MC-1 and their respective 1D conductance histograms determined by STM-BJ. (b) Intermolecular proton transfer occurs from MCH to 1,3Az under blue light, and from 1,3Az-H to SP-2 in dark. The target molecule in the measurement is shown in between Au electrodes, and the molecule supplemented in the measurement solution is shown without Au electrodes attached. (c) A diagram of the molecular AND logic gate and the corresponding measured conductance histograms. (d) Mixed monolayer formed with SP-3 and hexanethiolate and the conversion scheme from SP-3 to MC and from MC to MCH+. (e) Current is plotted as a function of voltage potential measured for mixed SAMs of SP-3 and hexanethiolate with conical EGaln top contacts. Green: exposed to 365 nm light for 20 min, then to white light for 12 h. Red: exposed to acid, followed by 365 nm light for 20 min. Black: exposed to acid, then to 365 nm light for 12 h, and finally to white light for 12 h. Blue: exposed to acid, followed by 365 nm light for 20 min, followed by base, and then white light for 12 h. (f) Left: Writing letters “rcclab” in an Au array where each letter is indicated by an 8-bit array. The bottom binary code corresponds to letter b. Right: Writing of “1” at positions where H+ can flow inside through the holes. Writing of “0” where no holes are punched. (a) is reproduced with permission from ref. 70, copyright (2014) American Chemical Society. (b and c) are reprinted with permission from ref. 71, copyright (2019) Wiley. (d–f) are reprinted with permission from ref. 72, copyright (2019) Wiley. |
In 2019, Cai et al. further expanded this idea of using pH and light dual-control for creating logic gates through a unique photo-induced proton transfer (PIPT) strategy using a non-photo-responsive azulene derivative and a photoacid spiropyran.71 The pH-sensitive azulene derivative 1,3Az (structure see bottom of Fig. 11b) was the target molecule bound between two Au electrodes, and the photoswitchable spiropyran (SP-2) and an equal amount of TFA were supplemented in the molecular solution for MCBJ measurements. As illustrated in Fig. 11b, merocyanine MCH released a proton to form SP-2 under blue light. Meanwhile, 1,3Az in proximity accepted this proton released by MCH to form 1,3Az-H. This process was referred to as PIPT. In MCBJ measurements, the protonated 1,3Az-H showed a conductance twelve times that of 1,3Az, agreeing with the previous work by Yang et al.27 This work demonstrated that the PIPT strategy enabled a light-induced conductance modulation for non-photoresponsive molecules. Furthermore, the authors used high (protonated) and low (deprotonated) conductance states of 1,3Az junctions as electrical output signals “1” and “0” to build single-molecule Boolean logic gates, and specifically, the AND and OR gate. Fig. 11c shows the construction of an AND gate where acid and blue light were defined as the inputs and the measured conductance state was defined as the output. Among the four combinations of the inputs, only “1, 1” combination gave rise to the “1” output; “0, 0”, “0, 1”, and “1, 0” all gave rise to the “0” output.
In the same year, Kumar et al. evaluated another spiropyran derivative, denoted as SP-3 (structure see Fig. 11d), as building blocks to construct well-ordered SAMs for the encoding of non-volatile information.72 Owing to the fact that when isomerization of SP-3 to MC occurred upon UV light exposure, MC could spontaneously thermalize back to SP-3,73 the authors exposed MC to acid for generating the protonated form labelled as MCH+ to create a locked state74,75 (Fig. 11d). Once MCH+ was formed, it could not convert back to SP-3 unless a basic solution was added. The authors recorded current density versus voltage (J/V) in tunnelling junctions formed with eutectic Gallium–Indium top-contacts76 to characterize the conductance of SP-3, MC, and MCH+. As plotted in Fig. 11e, the authors showed that a mixed monolayer of SP-3 and hexanethiolate under an exposure to UV light followed by white light (green curve) had a low conductance, while under an additional exposure to acid, the conductance of the mixed monolayer increased by a factor of 103, as shown in red (acid, followed by UV light) and black curves (acid, then UV light, then followed by white light). This result indicated that protonation effectively locked the molecular junction in the high conductance state and a white light treatment no longer converted it back to the original low conductance state. Finally, the experiment of the mixed monolayer exposed to acid, followed by UV, followed by base, and then by white light, showed the return of the conductance to the initial state (blue curve), indicating that the conductance locking process was reversed by a chemical treatment of base. Based on these results, the authors then developed a memory device, where SP-3 state was encoded as “0” bit, and MCH+ form was encoded as “1” bit. Bits were defined by their respective conductance values, as a ratio of 103 between the two conductance values was considered large enough for encoding the information. The authors demonstrated a non-volatile memory device where the rcclab six-character string encoded by 7-bit ASCII was written, erased, and rewritten (Fig. 11f) with 100% bits erased and one erroneous bit rewritten. Protonation as a chemical locking mechanism makes spiropyran-based molecular materials particularly encouraging for molecular memory devices.
Fig. 12 (a) Chemical structure of 44BP and STB-BJ technique employing an electrochemical gate. (b) Conductance vs. displacement traces for 44BP and optimized binding geometry of the H, M, and L conductance states by DFT. (c) The single molecule conductance vs. applied electrode potential for H, M, and L states at pH = 10.0, 4.1, and 1.0. (d) Chemical structure of 44VDP and 2D conductance vs. potential histograms measured for Ni–44VDP–Ni junctions in solutions of pH = 3.53, 3.01, and 2.35. Dotted lines indicate the locations of the conductance peaks. The applied potential in (c) and (d) is the substrate potential relative to a mercury sulfate reference electrode (MSE). (a–c) are adapted with permission from ref. 80, copyright (2014) Royal Society of Chemistry. (d) is adapted with permission from ref. 81, copyright (2018) American Chemical Society. |
In a later work, Brooke et al. applied Ni as source and drain electrodes to probe the conductance of 44VDP under a dual control of pH and electrochemical gate voltage,81 as Ni–44VDP–Ni junctions had been shown to display an enhanced response to electrochemical gating than Au–44VDP–Au junctions.83 Ni–44VDP–Ni junctions showed two conductance peaks, labelled as high and low conductance states. Based on the plateau lengths in 2D histograms, pKa values of 44VDP, and previous measurements of 44BP,83 the authors concluded that the high conductance state corresponded to deprotonated 44VDP and the low conductance state corresponded to protonated 44VDP at one of the pyridyl groups. In 2D conductance vs. gate potential histograms (Fig. 12d), a transition from high to low conductance for Ni–44VDP–Ni junctions happened on a more positive gate voltage when pH was decreased. The authors suggested that this result, combined with previous works, indicated that both deprotonated-pyridyl and protonated-pyridyl–H+ could bind to Ni electrodes, and the negatively charged electrodes, as was the case when gate potential was lower, favored the binding to the positively charged protonated molecules. The authors further showed that the STM-BJ traces exhibited individual proton transfer reactions in real-time and showed that such events were stochastic. These demonstrations showed that pH manipulation combined with external stimuli has emerged as a promising strategy to construct single-molecule devices for functions such as chemical sensors and logic gates, and furthermore, STM-BJ can allow us to study chemical processes at the single molecule level and observe dynamics and transient events that are not captured by ensemble approaches.
Although many molecules remain to be explored, a few of them showed a reduced HOMO–LUMO gap once the molecular backbones became protonated, primarily resulting from a lower LUMO orbital. Remarkably, experimental results and calculations indicated that (de)protonation processes sometimes are accompanied by quantum interference pattern switching. For example, protonation of the diketopyrrolopyrrole derivative SPPO occurred with appearance of destructive quantum interference and conductance decrease, while protonation of the pyridine derivative M3 resulted in destructive quantum interference disappearing and conductance increase. The impact of pH in charge transport is significant, and the underlying mechanism of pH-tuning will continue to be a crucial area for investigation in molecular electronics. We are optimistic that the strategy of regulating conductance by pH will enable new understanding of the structure–function relationships of molecular materials.
One of the important benefits from pH-regulated conductance studies is the realization of multi-functional molecular devices. So far, the combined use of pH and light has enabled the construction of single-molecule logic gates and non-volatile memory devices, and the pH and electrochemical gate dual control has been demonstrated as single-molecule switches. We note that theoretical calculations have proposed that protonation is capable of modulating the spin transport properties of specific molecules and the combined implementation of pH and magnetic field could modulate the direction and intensity of spin–polarized current.27,84,85 These works hold promise for new observations to be made in protonation-controlled single molecule spin transport under magnetic fields.
Furthermore, pH can serve as a unique probe for studying intramolecular and supramolecular interactions of complex systems. The examples detailed in this Review involve chemical groups such as amines, carboxylic acids, and amino acids that respond to pH, and these chemical groups are also critical elements in biological molecules such as nucleic acids and proteins. As we know, living organisms carefully regulate their pH values to maintain optimal enzyme activities because pH impacts the structures, structural dynamics, activities, and functions of biological macromolecules. On the other hand, electron-transfer reactions occur in a variety of biological processes such as photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation. Considering the importance of both pH and charge transfer in biology, these studies that reveal the electron transport properties of supramolecular systems at the single molecule level, as well as their regulations by pH, will deepen our understanding of biological processes and biomolecular assemblies. We anticipate that future studies will continue to elucidate mechanisms of pH-regulated charge transport through biomolecules and extend the insights that we gain from these studies to biology. As we approach conductance control with the use of pH, the rules of how pH governs the chemistry and electronics in junctions will be unveiled.
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