Majed
Alshammari‡
ab,
Alaa A.
Al-Jobory‡
ac,
Turki
Alotaibi‡
ab,
Colin J.
Lambert
a and
Ali
Ismael
*ad
aPhysics Department, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YB, UK. E-mail: k.ismael@lancaster.ac.uk
bDepartment of Physics, College of Science, Jouf University, Sakaka, Saudi Arabia
cDepartment of Physics, College of Science, University of Anbar, Anbar, Iraq
dDepartment of Physics, College of Education for Pure Science, Tikrit University, Tikrit, Iraq
First published on 7th October 2022
Through a comprehensive theoretical study, we demonstrate that single-molecule junctions formed from asymmetric molecules with different terminal groups can exhibit Seebeck coefficients, whose sign depends on the orientation of the molecule within the junction. Three anthracene-based molecules are studied, one of which exhibits this bi-thermoelectric behaviour, due to the presence of a thioacetate terminal group at one end and a pyridyl terminal group at the other. A pre-requisite for obtaining this behaviour is the use of junction electrodes formed from different materials. In our case, we use gold as the bottom electrode and graphene-coated gold as the top electrode. This demonstration of bi-thermoelecricity means that if molecules with alternating orientations can be deposited on a substrate, then they form a basis for boosting the thermovoltage in molecular-scale thermoelectric energy generators (TEGs).
High quality monolayers can be formed between symmetric27,28 or asymmetric electrodes.29 and furthermore, single-molecule QI effects30 can be translated to large area SAMs.31–34 This means that design principles developed from studies of single-molecule junctions can be utilised in more device-applicable thin film arrays of molecules. Here, our goal is to investigate new strategies towards the formation of thermoelectrically efficient devices involving highly asymmetric electrode-linker groups. In particular, we investigate whether or not the sign of the Seebeck coefficient of such junctions is sensitive to the orientation of the molecules. To explore this possibility, we studied the single-molecule junctions shown in Fig. 1b, composed of a molecule bound to a bottom flat gold electrode and to a top graphene sheet (Gr), which is in turn contacted by a gold top contact, in the form of an STM tip. In what follows, we study transport through such single-molecule junctions, formed using either of the anthracene-based molecules 1, 2 and 3. Our aim is to determine if flipping the molecules within the junction (i.e., rotating them about a horizontal axis through 180°) causes the sign of the Seebeck coefficient to change. The ability of a given molecule to exhibit Seebeck coefficients of either sign is known as bi-thermoelectricity and our aim is to determine if any of the three molecules shown in Fig. 1a is bi-thermoelectric.
Fig. 1 (a) Chemical structures of studied molecules 1–3, plus a graphene layer Gr. (b) Typical schematic of a fabricated junction. |
The three asymmetric anthracene-based molecules were terminated with pyridyl, thioacetate and SnMe3 anchor groups (Fig. 1a). We began by calculating the optimum binding distance dAnch between the anchors and the gold contact as shown in Fig. S5–S7.† It should be noted that 2 out of 3 anchors cleave when attached to a Au contact, as follows: –SAc cleaves and ends up as a Au–S contact, similarly, –SnMe3 forms a Au–C direct contact (–TMS). The optimum binding distance dAnch between the anchors and the graphene layer was also calculated as shown in Fig. S8–S10, for more detail see Section 2 of the ESI.†
As a first step, we investigated transport through these molecules in Au–Au junctions. Each case illustrates a unique type of transport even though all of them possess two different anchors. 1 shows LUMO-dominated (Lowest Unoccupied Molecular Orbital) transport hinting that the –Py moves the LUMO closest to the Fermi energy, whereas 2 exhibits HOMO-dominated (Highest Occupied Molecular Orbital) transport indicating that the thiol moves the HOMO closer to the Fermi energy. On the other hand, 3 exhibits mid-gap transport suggesting that –Py and –SH anchors cancel each other's opposing tendency to move the LUMO and HOMO closer to the Fermi energy. The 3 cases are shown in Fig. S11–S13, and for more detail see Section 3 of the ESI.† Since Seebeck coefficient is proportional to the slope of the logarithm of the transmission coefficient T(E), 1 and 2 have Seebeck coefficients of opposite signs and 3 has a low Seebeck coefficient.
Up to this point, we explored asymmetric molecules in gold–gold junctions. The next step is to insert a graphene layer close to the top Au-contact as shown in Fig. 1b. For experimental details about the STM measurements of such Gr-based junctions, see ref. 36.
Again, we consider 3 scenarios to establish their “flipping characteristic” as follows: scenario-a where molecule 1 flips between the Gr-layer and Au-substrate, which results into 2 orientations as shown in Fig. S17.† It should be noted that, orientation-1 experiences a cleavage at the SnMe3 anchor, when contacting to Au to form a direct C–Au bond. Despite the fact that the position of Fermi energy changes when the molecule flips, leading to a change in the magnitude of the Seebeck coefficient, there is no change in the sign of the Seebeck coefficient, because as shown in the top panel of Fig. S18,† the transmission curves remain LUMO dominated.
For molecule 2, the top panel of Fig. S20† demonstrates that the two orientations are HOMO dominated and again there is no change in the sign of the Seebeck coefficient upon flipping.
These results show that although the junctions are asymmetric, the sign of the Seebeck coefficient is insensitive to the orientations of the molecules. In contrast, as shown in Fig. 2, the sign of the Seebeck coefficient of molecule 3 is sensitive to its orientation and therefore molecule 3 exhibits bi-thermoelectricity. On the other hand, for a SAM, the measured sign of the Seebeck coefficient will be determined by the percentage of molecules adopting a given orientation. Therefore, if a SAM of 3 is deposited such that pyridyl–gold and thiol–gold bonds occur with equal probabilities, the average Seebeck coefficient of such a film will be low.
Fig. 2a illustrates the two orientations of molecule 3. This panel also shows that in orientation-1, cleavage at the thioacetate occurs, to form a Au–S contact. Panel 2b, shows the transmission coefficients T(E), of orientations-1 and -2 and demonstrates how T(E), switches from LUMO to HOMO-dominated transport (see orange and blue rectangles around Fermi level). We attribute this behaviour to the influence of the graphene layer, since in the absence of the layer, no such sign change occurs. Indeed, these results show that the top graphene coated contact defines the transport type, with Au + Gr-Py or Au + Gr-SAc, being either LUMO or HOMO dominated respectively.
Based on XPS measurements of a similar junctions, sandwiching asymmetric molecules such as 1, 2 and 3, in Au + Gr-Au junctions will result into both possible orientations and will yield films with rather different Seebeck characteristics. For 1 and 2, STM measurements of single-molecule's Seebeck coefficients would fluctuate in magnitude, but not in sign, across the film. In contrast, for SAMs formed from 3, single-molecule STM-based measurements would yield values of S, with random signs across the film. These qualitatively distinct behaviours provide new insights into the thermoelectric properties of SAMs. They also show that in the case of 3, if the orientations of molecules in neighboring islands could be controlled, to yield SAMs with alternating orientations and therefore Seebeck coefficients of alternating signs, then these could form a basis for boosting the thermovoltage in nanoscale thermoelectric generators.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2na00515h |
‡ These authors contributed equally to this work. |
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