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Dive into the research topics where Michael L. Steigerwald is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael L. Steigerwald.


Nature | 2006

Dependence of single-molecule junction conductance on molecular conformation

Latha Venkataraman; Jennifer E. Klare; Colin Nuckolls; Mark S. Hybertsen; Michael L. Steigerwald

Since it was first suggested that a single molecule might function as an active electronic component, a number of techniques have been developed to measure the charge transport properties of single molecules. Although scanning tunnelling microscopy observations under high vacuum conditions can allow stable measurements of electron transport, most measurements of a single molecule bonded in a metal–molecule–metal junction exhibit relatively large variations in conductance. As a result, even simple predictions about how molecules behave in such junctions have still not been rigorously tested. For instance, it is well known that the tunnelling current passing through a molecule depends on its conformation; but although some experiments have verified this effect, a comprehensive mapping of how junction conductance changes with molecular conformation is not yet available. In the simple case of a biphenyl—a molecule with two phenyl rings linked by a single C–C bond—conductance is expected to change with the relative twist angle between the two rings, with the planar conformation having the highest conductance. Here we use amine link groups to form single-molecule junctions with more reproducible current–voltage characteristics. This allows us to extract average conductance values from thousands of individual measurements on a series of seven biphenyl molecules with different ring substitutions that alter the twist angle of the molecules. We find that the conductance for the series decreases with increasing twist angle, consistent with a cosine-squared relation predicted for transport through π-conjugated biphenyl systems.


Nature Communications | 2015

Molecular helices as electron acceptors in high-performance bulk heterojunction solar cells

Yu Zhong; M. Tuan Trinh; Rongsheng Chen; Geoffrey E. Purdum; Petr P. Khlyabich; Melda Sezen; Seokjoon Oh; Haiming Zhu; Brandon Fowler; Boyuan Zhang; Wei Wang; Chang-Yong Nam; Charles T. Black; Michael L. Steigerwald; Yueh-Lin Loo; Fay Ng; X.-Y. Zhu; Colin Nuckolls

Despite numerous organic semiconducting materials synthesized for organic photovoltaics in the past decade, fullerenes are widely used as electron acceptors in highly efficient bulk-heterojunction solar cells. None of the non-fullerene bulk heterojunction solar cells have achieved efficiencies as high as fullerene-based solar cells. Design principles for fullerene-free acceptors remain unclear in the field. Here we report examples of helical molecular semiconductors as electron acceptors that are on par with fullerene derivatives in efficient solar cells. We achieved an 8.3% power conversion efficiency in a solar cell, which is a record high for non-fullerene bulk heterojunctions. Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy revealed both electron and hole transfer processes at the donor−acceptor interfaces. Atomic force microscopy reveals a mesh-like network of acceptors with pores that are tens of nanometres in diameter for efficient exciton separation and charge transport. This study describes a new motif for designing highly efficient acceptors for organic solar cells.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Efficient Organic Solar Cells with Helical Perylene Diimide Electron Acceptors

Yu Zhong; M. Tuan Trinh; Rongsheng Chen; Wei Wang; Petr P. Khlyabich; Bharat Kumar; Qizhi Xu; Chang-Yong Nam; Charles T. Black; Michael L. Steigerwald; Yueh-Lin Loo; Shengxiong Xiao; Fay Ng; X.-Y. Zhu; Colin Nuckolls

We report an efficiency of 6.1% for a solution-processed non-fullerene solar cell using a helical perylene diimide (PDI) dimer as the electron acceptor. Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy revealed both electron and hole transfer processes at the donor-acceptor interfaces, indicating that charge carriers are created from photogenerated excitons in both the electron donor and acceptor phases. Light-intensity-dependent current-voltage measurements suggested different recombination rates under short-circuit and open-circuit conditions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Photochemical Reactivity of Graphene

Haitao Liu; S. Ryu; Zheyuan Chen; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls; Louis E. Brus

We demonstrate a photochemical reaction between graphene and benzoyl peroxide. This reaction introduces spatially localized defects into the graphene basal plane. The reactivity of the single-layer graphene is approximately 14 times higher than that of the double-layer graphene. Our result suggests that photoexcited graphene transfers a hot electron to benzoyl peroxide and induces its decomposition to a phenyl radical.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Formation and Evolution of Single-Molecule Junctions

Masha Kamenetska; M. Koentopp; Adam C. Whalley; Young S. Park; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls; Mark S. Hybertsen; Latha Venkataraman

We analyze the formation and evolution statistics of single-molecule junctions bonded to gold electrodes using amine, methyl sulfide, and dimethyl phosphine link groups by measuring conductance as a function of junction elongation. For each link, the maximum elongation and formation probability increase with molecular length, strongly suggesting that processes other than just metal-molecule bond breakage play a key role in junction evolution under stress. Density functional theory calculations of adiabatic trajectories show sequences of atomic-scale changes in junction structure, including shifts in the attachment point, that account for the long conductance plateau lengths observed.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2008

Molecular Electronic Devices Based on Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Electrodes

Alina K. Feldman; Michael L. Steigerwald; Xuefeng Guo; Colin Nuckolls

As the top-down fabrication techniques for silicon-based electronic materials have reached the scale of molecular lengths, researchers have been investigating nanostructured materials to build electronics from individual molecules. Researchers have directed extensive experimental and theoretical efforts toward building functional optoelectronic devices using individual organic molecules and fabricating metal-molecule junctions. Although this method has many advantages, its limitations lead to large disagreement between experimental and theoretical results. This Account describes a new method to create molecular electronic devices, covalently bridging a gap in a single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) with an electrically functional molecule. First, we introduce a molecular-scale gap into a nanotube by precise oxidative cutting through a lithographic mask. Now functionalized with carboxylic acids, the ends of the cleaved carbon nanotubes are reconnected with conjugated diamines to give robust diamides. The molecular electronic devices prepared in this fashion can withstand and respond to large environmental changes based on the functional groups in the molecules. For example, with oligoanilines as the molecular bridge, the conductance of the device is sensitive to pH. Similarly, using diarylethylenes as the bridge provides devices that can reversibly switch between conjugated and nonconjugated states. The molecular bridge can perform the dual task of carrying electrical current and sensing/recognition through biological events such as protein/substrate binding and DNA hybridization. The devices based on DNA can measure the difference in electrical properties of complementary and mismatched strands. A well-matched duplex DNA 15-mer in the gap exhibits a 300-fold lower resistance than a duplex with a GT or CA mismatch. This system provides an ultrasensitive way to detect single-nucleotide polymorphisms at the individual molecule level. Restriction enzymes can cleave certain cDNA strands assembled between the SWNT electrodes; therefore, these strands maintain their native conformation when bridging the ends of the SWNTs. This methodology for creating novel molecular circuits forges both literal and figurative connections between chemistry, physics, materials science, and biology and promises a new generation of integrated multifunctional sensors and devices.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Conductance and geometry of pyridine-linked single-molecule junctions

Masha Kamenetska; Su Ying Quek; Adam C. Whalley; Michael L. Steigerwald; Hyoung Joon Choi; Steven G. Louie; Colin Nuckolls; Mark S. Hybertsen; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Latha Venkataraman

We have measured the conductance and characterized molecule-electrode binding geometries of four pyridine-terminated molecules by elongating and then compressing gold point contacts in a solution of molecules. We have found that all pyridine-terminated molecules exhibit bistable conductance signatures, signifying that the nature of the pyridine-gold bond allows two distinct conductance states that are accessed as the gold-molecule-gold junction is elongated. We have identified the low-conductance state as corresponding to a molecule fully stretched out between the gold electrodes, where the distance between contacts correlates with the length of the molecule; the high-conductance state is due to a molecule bound at an angle. For all molecules, we have found that the distribution of junction elongations in the low-conductance state is the same, while in the high-conductance state, the most likely elongation length increases linearly with molecule length. The results of first-principles conductance calculations for the four molecules in the low-conductance geometry agree well with the experimental results and show that the dominant conducting channel in the conjugated pyridine-linked molecules is through the pi* orbital.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Quantitative Intramolecular Singlet Fission in Bipentacenes

Samuel N. Sanders; Elango Kumarasamy; Andrew B. Pun; M. Tuan Trinh; Bonnie Choi; Jianlong Xia; Elliot J. Taffet; Jonathan Z. Low; John R. Miller; Xavier Roy; X.-Y. Zhu; Michael L. Steigerwald; Luis M. Campos

Singlet fission (SF) has the potential to significantly enhance the photocurrent in single-junction solar cells and thus raise the power conversion efficiency from the Shockley-Queisser limit of 33% to 44%. Until now, quantitative SF yield at room temperature has been observed only in crystalline solids or aggregates of oligoacenes. Here, we employ transient absorption spectroscopy, ultrafast photoluminescence spectroscopy, and triplet photosensitization to demonstrate intramolecular singlet fission (iSF) with triplet yields approaching 200% per absorbed photon in a series of bipentacenes. Crucially, in dilute solution of these systems, SF does not depend on intermolecular interactions. Instead, SF is an intrinsic property of the molecules, with both the fission rate and resulting triplet lifetime determined by the degree of electronic coupling between covalently linked pentacene molecules. We found that the triplet pair lifetime can be as short as 0.5 ns but can be extended up to 270 ns.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Helical ribbons for molecular electronics.

Yu Zhong; Bharat Kumar; Seokjoon Oh; M. Tuan Trinh; Katherine Elbert; Panpan Li; X.-Y. Zhu; Shengxiong Xiao; Fay Ng; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls

We describe the design and synthesis of a new graphene ribbon architecture that consists of perylenediimide (PDI) subunits fused together by ethylene bridges. We created a prototype series of oligomers consisting of the dimer, trimer, and tetramer. The steric congestion at the fusion point between the PDI units creates helical junctions, and longer oligomers form helical ribbons. Thin films of these oligomers form the active layer in n-type field effect transistors. UV-vis spectroscopy reveals the emergence of an intense long-wavelength transition in the tetramer. From DFT calculations, we find that the HOMO-2 to LUMO transition is isoenergetic with the HOMO to LUMO transition in the tetramer. We probe these transitions directly using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. The HOMO-2 to LUMO transition electronically connects the PDI subunits with the ethylene bridges, and its energy depends on the length of the oligomer.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2008

Amine-linked single-molecule circuits: systematic trends across molecular families

Mark S. Hybertsen; Latha Venkataraman; Jennifer E. Klare; Adam C. Whalley; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls

A comprehensive review is presented of single-molecule junction conductance measurements across families of molecules measured while breaking a gold point contact in a solution of molecules with amine end groups. A theoretical framework unifies the picture for the amine-gold link bonding and the tunnel coupling through the junction using density functional theory based calculations. The reproducible electrical characteristics and utility for many molecules is shown to result from the selective binding between the gold electrodes and amine link groups through a donor-acceptor bond to undercoordinated gold atoms. While the bond energy is modest, the maximum force sustained by the junction is comparable to, but less than, that required to break gold point contacts. The calculated tunnel coupling provides conductance trends for all 41 molecule measurements presented here, as well as insight into the variability of conductance due to the conformational changes within molecules with torsional degrees of freedom. The calculated trends agree to within a factor of 2 with the measured values for conductance ranging from 10(-7)G(0) to 10(-2)G(0), where G(0) is the quantum of conductance (2e(2)/h).

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Mark S. Hybertsen

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Shengxiong Xiao

Shanghai Normal University

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Fay Ng

Columbia University

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