Hydrogen-bond-induced quantum interference in single-molecule junctions of regioisomers

Ge, Lingbing and Hou, Songjun and Chen, Yaorong and Wu, Qingqing and Long, Lanxin and Yang, Xingzhou and Ji, Yu and Lin, Luchun and Xue, Guodong and Liu, Junyang and Liu, Xiaodong and Lambert, Colin and Hong, Wenjing and Zheng, Yonghao (2022) Hydrogen-bond-induced quantum interference in single-molecule junctions of regioisomers. Chemical Science. ISSN 2041-6520

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Abstract

Solvents can play a significant role in tuning the electrical conductance of single-molecule junctions. In this respect, protic solvents offer the potential to form hydrogen bonds with molecular backbones and induce electrostatic gating via their dipole moments. Here we demonstrate that the effect of hydrogen bond formation on conductance depends on whether transport through the junction is controlled by destructive quantum interference (DQI) or constructive quantum interference (CQI). Furthermore, we show that a protic solvent can be used to switch the conductance of single-molecule junctions between the two forms of quantum interference. To explore this possibility, two regioisomers (BIT-Zwitterion and BIT-Neutral) were synthesized and their single-molecule conductances in aprotic and protic solvents were investigated using a scanning-tunneling-microscope-based break junction technique, combined with density functional theory and quantum transport theory. We find that the protic solvent twists the geometry of BIT-Zwitterion by introducing intermolecular hydrogen bonds between the solvent and target molecule. Moreover, it increases the energy gap between the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the molecule by imposing different electrostatic gating on the delocalized HOMO and localized LUMO, leading to a lower conductance compared to that in aprotic solvent. In contrast, the conductance of BIT-Neutral increases due to a transformation from DQI to CQI originating from a change from a planar to a folded conformation in the protic solvent. In addition, the stacking between the two folded moieties produces an extra throughspace transport path, which further contributes to conductance. This study demonstrates that combinations of protic solvents and regioisomers present a versatile route to controlling quantum interference and therefore single-molecule conductance, by enabling control of hydrogen bond formation, electrostatic gating and through-space transport.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Chemical Science
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Data Sharing Template/no
Subjects:
?? nogeneral chemistrychemistry(all) ??
ID Code:
174406
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
10 Aug 2022 15:20
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
07 Sep 2024 00:30