Edmund Leary
University of Liverpool
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Featured researches published by Edmund Leary.
Nano Letters | 2013
Charalambos Evangeli; Katalin Gillemot; Edmund Leary; M. Teresa González; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Colin J. Lambert; Nicolás Agraït
We report the measurement of conductance and thermopower of C60 molecular junctions using a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). In contrast to previous measurements, we use the imaging capability of the STM to determine precisely the number of molecules in the junction and measure thermopower and conductance continuously and simultaneously during formation and breaking of the molecular junction, achieving a complete characterization at the single-molecule level. We find that the thermopower of C60 dimers formed by trapping a C60 on the tip and contacting an isolated C60 almost doubles with respect to that of a single C60 and is among the highest values measured to date for organic materials. Density functional theory calculations show that the thermopower and the figure of merit continue increasing with the number of C60 molecules, demonstrating the enhancement of thermoelectric preformance by manipulation of intermolecular interactions.
Nano Letters | 2011
Edmund Leary; M. Teresa Gonz; Cornelia van der Pol; Martin R. Bryce; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Nicolás Agraït
One of the challenging goals of molecular electronics is to wire exactly one molecule between two electrodes. This is generally nontrivial under ambient conditions. We describe a new and straightforward protocol for unambiguously isolating a single organic molecule on a metal surface and wiring it inside a nanojunction under ambient conditions. Our strategy employs C(60) terminal groups which act as molecular beacons allowing molecules to be visualized and individually targeted on a gold surface using an scanning tunneling microscope. After isolating one molecule, we then use the C(60) groups as alligator clips to wire it between the tip and surface. Once wired, we can monitor how the conductance of a purely one molecule junction evolves with time, stretch the molecule in the junction, observing characteristic current plateaus upon elongation, and also perform direct I-V spectroscopy. By characterizing and controlling the junction, we can draw stronger conclusions about the observed variation in molecular conductance than was previously possible.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Carlos R. Arroyo; Edmund Leary; Andres Castellanos-Gomez; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Maria Teresa González; Nicolás Agraït
We study the formation mechanism of molecular junctions using break-junction experiments. We explore the contribution of gold-atom rearrangements in the electrodes by analyzing the junction stretching length, the length of individual plateaus, and the length of the gold one-atom contacts. Comparing the results for alkane dithiols and diamines, we conclude that thiols affect gold electrode dynamics significantly more than amines. This is a vital factor to be considered when comparing different binding groups.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Henrry M. Osorio; Samantha R. Catarelli; Pilar Cea; Josef B. G. Gluyas; František Hartl; Simon J. Higgins; Edmund Leary; Paul J. Low; Santiago Martín; Richard J. Nichols; Joanne Tory; Jens Ulstrup; Andrea Vezzoli; David C. Milan; Qiang Zeng
Electrochemical gating at the single molecule level of viologen molecular bridges in ionic liquids is examined. Contrary to previous data recorded in aqueous electrolytes, a clear and sharp peak in the single molecule conductance versus electrochemical potential data is obtained in ionic liquids. These data are rationalized in terms of a two-step electrochemical model for charge transport across the redox bridge. In this model the gate coupling in the ionic liquid is found to be fully effective with a modeled gate coupling parameter, ξ, of unity. This compares to a much lower gate coupling parameter of 0.2 for the equivalent aqueous gating system. This study shows that ionic liquids are far more effective media for gating the conductance of single molecules than either solid-state three-terminal platforms created using nanolithography, or aqueous media.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Christian R. Parker; Edmund Leary; Riccardo Frisenda; Zhongming Wei; Karsten Jennum; Emil Glibstrup; Peter Bæch Abrahamsen; Marco Santella; Mikkel A. Christensen; Eduardo Antonio Della Pia; Tao Li; Maria Teresa González; Xingbin Jiang; Thorbjørn J. Morsing; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Bo W. Laursen; Kasper Nørgaard; Herre S. J. van der Zant; Nicolás Agraït; Mogens Brøndsted Nielsen
Cruciform-like molecules with two orthogonally placed π-conjugated systems have in recent years attracted significant interest for their potential use as molecular wires in molecular electronics. Here we present synthetic protocols for a large selection of cruciform molecules based on oligo(phenyleneethynylene) (OPE) and tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) scaffolds, end-capped with acetyl-protected thiolates as electrode anchoring groups. The molecules were subjected to a comprehensive study of their conducting properties as well as their photophysical and electrochemical properties in solution. The complex nature of the molecules and their possible binding in different configurations in junctions called for different techniques of conductance measurements: (1) conducting-probe atomic force microscopy (CP-AFM) measurements on self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), (2) mechanically controlled break-junction (MCBJ) measurements, and (3) scanning tunneling microscopy break-junction (STM-BJ) measurements. The CP-AFM measurements showed structure-property relationships from SAMs of series of OPE3 and OPE5 cruciform molecules; the conductance of the SAM increased with the number of dithiafulvene (DTF) units (0, 1, 2) along the wire, and it increased when substituting two arylethynyl end groups of the OPE3 backbone with two DTF units. The MCBJ and STM-BJ studies on single molecules both showed that DTFs decreased the junction formation probability, but, in contrast, no significant influence on the single-molecule conductance was observed. We suggest that the origins of the difference between SAM and single-molecule measurements lie in the nature of the molecule-electrode interface as well as in effects arising from molecular packing in the SAMs. This comprehensive study shows that for complex molecules care should be taken when directly comparing single-molecule measurements and measurements of SAMs and solid-state devices thereof.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Delia Miguel; Luis Álvarez de Cienfuegos; Ana Martín-Lasanta; Sara P. Morcillo; Linda A. Zotti; Edmund Leary; Marius Bürkle; Yoshihiro Asai; Rocío Jurado; Diego J. Cárdenas; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Nicolás Agraït; Juan M. Cuerva; M. Teresa González
In this paper, we have systematically studied how the replacement of a benzene ring by a heterocyclic compound in oligo(phenyleneethynylene) (OPE) derivatives affects the conductance of a molecular wire using the scanning tunneling microscope-based break junction technique. We describe for the first time how OPE derivatives with a central pyrimidine ring can efficiently link to the gold electrode by two pathways presenting two different conductance G values. We have demonstrated that this effect is associated with the presence of two efficient conductive pathways of different length: the conventional end-to-end configuration, and another with one of the electrodes linked directly to the central ring. This represents one of the few examples in which two defined conductive states can be set up in a single molecule without the aid of an external stimulus. Moreover, we have observed that the conductance through the full length of the heterocycle-based OPEs is basically unaffected by the presence of the heterocycle. All these results and the simplicity of the proposed molecules push forward the development of compounds with multiple conductance pathways, which would be a breakthrough in the field of molecular electronics.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
M. Teresa González; Adrián Barahona Díaz; Edmund Leary; Raúl García; M. Ángeles Herranz; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Nazario Martín; Nicolás Agraït
We study the stability of molecular junctions based on an oligo(phenylenethynylene) (OPE) diamine using a scanning tunneling microscope at room temperature. In our analysis, we were able to differentiate between junctions most probably formed by either one or several molecules. Varying the stretching rate of the junctions between 0.1 and 100 nm/s, we observe practically no variation of the length over which both kinds of junction can be stretched before rupture. This is in contrast with previously reported results for similar compounds. Our results suggest that, over the studied speed range, the junction breakage is caused purely by the growth of the gap between the gold electrodes and the elastic limit of the amine-gold bond. On the other hand, without stretching, junctions would survive for periods of time longer than our maximum measurement time (at least 10 s for multiple-molecule junctions) and can be considered, hence, very stable.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009
Edmund Leary; Harm van Zalinge; Simon J. Higgins; Richard J. Nichols; Fabrizia Fabrizi de Biani; Piero Leoni; Lorella Marchetti; Piero Zanello
Reaction of [Pt(6)(CO)(4)(P(t)Bu(2))(4)Cl(2)] with excess HS(CH(2))(4)SH in Et(2)NH gave highly stable [Pt(6)(CO)(4)(P(t)Bu(2))(4){S(CH(2))(4)SH}(2)], which adsorbs unchanged onto gold surfaces. This permitted the fabrication and electrical characterisation of gold|molecule|gold junctions involving a well-defined metal carbonyl cluster compound.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014
Andrea La Rosa; Katalin Gillemot; Edmund Leary; Charalambos Evangeli; Maria Teresa González; Salvatore Filippone; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Nicolás Agraït; Colin J. Lambert; Nazario Martín
Two C60 dumbbell molecules have been synthesized containing either cyclopropane or pyrrolidine rings connecting two fullerenes to a central fluorene core. A combination of spectroscopic techniques reveals that the cyclopropane dumbbell possesses better electronic communication between the fullerenes and the fluorene. This observation is underpinned by DFT transport calculations, which show that the cyclopropane dumbbell gives a higher calculated single-molecule conductance, a result of an energetically lower-lying LUMO level that extends deeper into the backbone. This strengthens the idea that cyclopropane behaves as a quasi-double bond.
Small | 2013
Katalin Gillemot; Charalambos Evangeli; Edmund Leary; Andrea La Rosa; M. Teresa González; Salvatore Filippone; Iain Grace; Gabino Rubio-Bollinger; Jaime Ferrer; Nazario Martín; Colin J. Lambert; Nicolás Agraït
A combined experimental and theoretical investigation is carried out into the electrical transport across a fullerene dumbbell one-molecule junction. The newly designed molecule comprises two C60 s connected to a fluorene backbone via cyclopropyl groups. It is wired between gold electrodes under ambient conditions by pressing the tip of a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM) onto one of the C60 groups. The STM allows us to identify a single molecule before the junction is formed through imaging, which means unambiguously that only one molecule is wired. Once lifted, the same molecule could be wired many times as it was strongly fixed to the tip, and a high conductance state close to 10(-2) G0 is found. The results also suggest that the relative conductance fluctuations are low as a result of the low mobility of the molecule. Theoretical analysis indicates that the molecule is connected directly to one electrode through the central fluorene, and that to bind it to the gold fully it has to be pushed through a layer of adsorbates naturally present in the experiment.