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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Wandlowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Wandlowski.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Correlations between Molecular Structure and Single-Junction Conductance: A Case Study with Oligo(phenylene-ethynylene)-Type Wires

Veerabhadrarao Kaliginedi; Pavel Moreno-García; Hennie Valkenier; Wenjing Hong; Víctor M. García-Suárez; Petra Buiter; Jelmer L.H. Otten; Jan C. Hummelen; Colin J. Lambert; Thomas Wandlowski

The charge transport characteristics of 11 tailor-made dithiol-terminated oligo(phenylene-ethynylene) (OPE)-type molecules attached to two gold electrodes were studied at a solid/liquid interface in a combined approach using an STM break junction (STM-BJ) and a mechanically controlled break junction (MCBJ) setup. We designed and characterized 11 structurally distinct dithiol-terminated OPE-type molecules with varied length and HOMO/LUMO energy. Increase of the molecular length and/or of the HOMO-LUMO gap leads to a decrease of the single-junction conductance of the linearly conjugate acenes. The experimental data and simulations suggest a nonresonant tunneling mechanism involving hole transport through the molecular HOMO, with a decay constant β = 3.4 ± 0.1 nm(-1) and a contact resistance R(c) = 40 kΩ per Au-S bond. The introduction of a cross-conjugated anthraquinone or a dihydroanthracene central unit results in lower conductance values, which are attributed to a destructive quantum interference phenomenon for the former and a broken π-conjugation for the latter. The statistical analysis of conductance-distance and current-voltage traces revealed details of evolution and breaking of molecular junctions. In particular, we explored the effect of stretching rate and junction stability. We compare our experimental results with DFT calculations using the ab initio code SMEAGOL and discuss how the structure of the molecular wires affects the conductance values.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Single Molecular Conductance of Tolanes: Experimental and Theoretical Study on the Junction Evolution Dependent on the Anchoring Group

Wenjing Hong; David Zsolt Manrique; Pavel Moreno-García; Murat Gulcur; Artem Mishchenko; Colin J. Lambert; Martin R. Bryce; Thomas Wandlowski

Employing a scanning tunneling microscopy based beak junction technique and mechanically controlled break junction experiments, we investigated tolane (diphenylacetylene)-type single molecular junctions having four different anchoring groups (SH, pyridyl (PY), NH(2), and CN) at a solid/liquid interface. The combination of current-distance and current-voltage measurements and their quantitative statistical analysis revealed the following sequence for junction formation probability and stability: PY > SH > NH(2) > CN. For all single molecular junctions investigated, we observed the evolution through multiple junction configurations, with a particularly well-defined binding geometry for PY. The comparison of density functional theory type model calculations and molecular dynamics simulations with the experimental results revealed structure and mechanistic details of the evolution of the different types of (single) molecular junctions upon stretching quantitatively.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Single-molecule junctions based on nitrile-terminated biphenyls : a promising new anchoring group

Artem Mishchenko; Linda A. Zotti; David Vonlanthen; Marius Bürkle; Fabian Pauly; J. Cuevas; Marcel Mayor; Thomas Wandlowski

We present a combined experimental and theoretical study of the electronic transport through single-molecule junctions based on nitrile-terminated biphenyl derivatives. Using a scanning tunneling microscope-based break-junction technique, we show that the nitrile-terminated compounds give rise to well-defined peaks in the conductance histograms resulting from the high selectivity of the N-Au binding. Ab initio calculations have revealed that the transport takes place through the tail of the LUMO. Furthermore, we have found both theoretically and experimentally that the conductance of the molecular junctions is roughly proportional to the square of the cosine of the torsion angle between the two benzene rings of the biphenyl core, which demonstrates the robustness of this structure-conductance relationship.


Electrochimica Acta | 1990

Galvani potential scales for water-nitrobenzene and water-1,2-dichloroethane interfaces

Thomas Wandlowski; V. Mareček; Z. Samec

Abstract A practical definition of the absolute Galvani potential scale for a liquid—liquid interface can be based on a set of single-ion transfer Gibbs energies. The consistency of transfer energies for picrate, perchlorate, tetramethylammonium, tetraethylammonium, tetrabutylammonium and tetraphenylarsonium has been examined by using cyclic voltammetry at the interface betwen two immiscible electrolyte solutions. The standard Gibbs energies of transfer of these ions from water to nitrobenzene or 1,2-dichloroethane have been revised.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Single-Molecule Conductance of Functionalized Oligoynes: Length Dependence and Junction Evolution

Pavel Moreno-García; Murat Gulcur; David Zsolt Manrique; Thomas Pope; Wenjing Hong; Veerabhadrarao Kaliginedi; Cancan Huang; Andrei S. Batsanov; Martin R. Bryce; Colin J. Lambert; Thomas Wandlowski

We report a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of the length dependence and anchor group dependence of the electrical conductance of a series of oligoyne molecular wires in single-molecule junctions with gold contacts. Experimentally, we focus on the synthesis and properties of diaryloligoynes with n = 1, 2, and 4 triple bonds and the anchor dihydrobenzo[b]thiophene (BT). For comparison, we also explored the aurophilic anchor group cyano (CN), amino (NH2), thiol (SH), and 4-pyridyl (PY). Scanning tunneling microscopy break junction (STM-BJ) and mechanically controllable break junction (MCBJ) techniques are employed to investigate single-molecule conductance characteristics. The BT moiety is superior as compared to traditional anchoring groups investigated so far. BT-terminated oligoynes display a 100% probability of junction formation and possess conductance values which are the highest of the oligoynes studied and, moreover, are higher than other conjugated molecular wires of similar length. Density functional theory (DFT)-based calculations are reported for oligoynes with n = 1-4 triple bonds. Complete conductance traces and conductance distributions are computed for each family of molecules. The sliding of the anchor groups leads to oscillations in both the electrical conductance and the binding energies of the studied molecular wires. In agreement with experimental results, BT-terminated oligoynes are predicted to have a high electrical conductance. The experimental attenuation constants βH range between 1.7 nm(-1) (CN) and 3.2 nm(-1) (SH) and show the following trend: βH(CN) < βH(NH2) < βH(BT) < βH(PY) ≈ βH(SH). DFT-based calculations yield lower values, which range between 0.4 nm(-1) (CN) and 2.2 nm(-1) (PY).


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Chemically controlled conductivity: torsion-angle dependence in a single-molecule biphenyldithiol junction.

David Vonlanthen; Artem Mishchenko; Mark Elbing; Michael Neuburger; Thomas Wandlowski; Marcel Mayor

Stepwise regulation of the molecular conductance was observed in a series of eight biphenyldithiols with fixed torsion angles between the phenyl rings. These compounds were synthesized and their single-molecule conductance was investigated in an STM junction. A cos2 dependence was found between the interplane torsion angle and the single-molecule conductivity (see plot).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Trimethylsilyl-Terminated Oligo(phenylene ethynylene)s: An Approach to Single-Molecule Junctions with Covalent Au–C σ-Bonds

Wenjing Hong; Hui Li; Shi-Xia Liu; Yongchun Fu; Jian-Feng Li; Veerabhadrarao Kaliginedi; Silvio Decurtins; Thomas Wandlowski

A new and efficient approach using cleaving of trimethylsilyl groups to create covalent Au-C anchoring sites has been developed for single-molecule junction conductance measurements. Employing the mechanically controllable break junction (MCBJ) technique in liquid, we demonstrate the formation of highly conducting single molecular junctions of several OPE derivatives. The created junctions are mechanically stable and exhibit conductances around one order of magnitude higher than those of their dithiol analogues. Extended assembly and reaction times lead to oligomerization. Combined STM imaging and gap-mode Raman experiments provide structure evidence to support the formation of covalent Au-C contacts and further oligomerization.


Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2011

An MCBJ case study: The influence of π-conjugation on the single-molecule conductance at a solid/liquid interface.

Wenjing Hong; Hennie Valkenier; Gábor Mészáros; David Zsolt Manrique; Artem Mishchenko; Alexander Putz; Pavel Moreno Garcia; Colin J. Lambert; Jan C. Hummelen; Thomas Wandlowski

Summary π-Conjugation plays an important role in charge transport through single molecular junctions. We describe in this paper the construction of a mechanically controlled break-junction setup (MCBJ) equipped with a highly sensitive log I–V converter in order to measure ultralow conductances of molecular rods trapped between two gold leads. The current resolution of the setup reaches down to 10 fA. We report single-molecule conductance measurements of an anthracene-based linearly conjugated molecule (AC), of an anthraquinone-based cross-conjugated molecule (AQ), and of a dihydroanthracene-based molecule (AH) with a broken conjugation. The quantitative analysis of complementary current–distance and current–voltage measurements revealed details of the influence of π-conjugation on the single-molecule conductance.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Charge Transport in Photoswitchable Dimethyldihydropyrene-Type Single-Molecule Junctions

Diego Roldan; Veerabhadrarao Kaliginedi; Saioa Cobo; Viliam Kolivoška; Christophe Bucher; Wenjing Hong; Guy Royal; Thomas Wandlowski

The conductance properties of a photoswitchable dimethyldihydropyrene (DHP) derivative have been investigated for the first time in single-molecule junctions using the mechanically controllable break junction technique. We demonstrate that the reversible structure changes induced by isomerization of a single bispyridine-substituted DHP molecule are correlated with a large drop of the conductance value. We found a very high ON/OFF ratio (>10(4)) and an excellent reversibility of conductance switching.


Nature Communications | 2015

A quantum circuit rule for interference effects in single-molecule electrical junctions

David Zsolt Manrique; Cancan Huang; Masoud Baghernejad; Xiaotao Zhao; Oday A. Al-Owaedi; Hatef Sadeghi; Veerabhadrarao Kaliginedi; Wenjing Hong; Murat Gulcur; Thomas Wandlowski; Martin R. Bryce; Colin J. Lambert

A quantum circuit rule for combining quantum interference effects in the conductive properties of oligo(phenyleneethynylene) (OPE)-type molecules possessing three aromatic rings was investigated both experimentally and theoretically. Molecules were of the type X-Y-X, where X represents pyridyl anchors with para (p), meta (m) or ortho (o) connectivities and Y represents a phenyl ring with p and m connectivities. The conductances GXmX (GXpX) of molecules of the form X-m-X (X-p-X), with meta (para) connections in the central ring, were predominantly lower (higher), irrespective of the meta, para or ortho nature of the anchor groups X, demonstrating that conductance is dominated by the nature of quantum interference in the central ring Y. The single-molecule conductances were found to satisfy the quantum circuit rule Gppp/Gpmp=Gmpm/Gmmm. This demonstrates that the contribution to the conductance from the central ring is independent of the para versus meta nature of the anchor groups.

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