TY - JOUR
T1 - Collectively induced quantum-confined stark effect in monolayers of molecules consisting of polar repeating units
AU - Rissner, Ferdinand
AU - Egger, David A.
AU - Natan, Amir
AU - Körzdörfer, Thomas
AU - Kümmel, Stephan
AU - Kronik, Leeor
AU - Zojer, Egbert
AU - Kuemmel, Stephan
N1 - Institute of Chemistry of the Chinese Academy of Sciences; Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P20972-N20]; Austrian Academy of Sciences; Alexander-von-Humboldt-Foundation; German-Israeli-Foundation; Israel Science Foundation; Lise Meitner Minerva Center for Computational Chemistry; [GRK. 1640]The authors thank A.M. Kelterer, O.T. Hofmann, C. Slugovc, Z.Y. Ma, and U. Wang for fruitful discussions, and Z.Y. Ma from the Institute of Chemistry of the Chinese Academy of Sciences also for support with the Gaussian HSE06 calculations. We thank the ZID of the TU Graz for providing computational resources. The research was largely funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF): P20972-N20. D.A.E. is recipient of a DOC-fellowship of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. T.K. acknowledges financial support by the Alexander-von-Humboldt-Foundation. S.K. acknowledges financial support by GRK. 1640 and the German-Israeli-Foundation. L.K. acknowledges financial support by the Israel Science Foundation, the German-Israeli-Foundation, and the Lise Meitner Minerva Center for Computational Chemistry.
PY - 2011/11/23
Y1 - 2011/11/23
N2 - The electronic structure of terpyrimidinethiols is investigated by means of density-functional theory calculations for isolated molecules and monolayers. In the transition from molecule to selfassembled monolayer (SAM), we observe that the band gap is substantially reduced, frontier states increasingly localize on opposite sides of the SAM, and this polarization in several instances is in the direction opposite to the polarization of the overall charge density. This behavior can be analyzed by analogy to inorganic semiconductor quantum-wells, which, as the SAMs studied here, can be regarded as semiperiodic systems. There, similar observations are made under the influence of a, typically external, electric field and are known as the quantum-confined Stark effect. Without any external perturbation, in oligopyrimidine SAMs one encounters an energy gradient that is generated by the dipole moments of the pyrimidine repeat units. It is particularly strong, reaching values of about 1.6 eV/nm, which corresponds to a substantial electric field of 1.6 × 10 7 V/cm. Close-lying σ-and π-states turn out to be a particular complication for a reliable description of the present systems, as their order is influenced not only by the docking groups and bonding to the metal, but also by the chosen computational approach. In the latter context we demonstrate that deliberately picking a hybrid functional allows avoiding pitfalls due to the infamous self-interaction error. Our results show that when aiming to build a monolayer with a specific electronic structure one can not only resort to the traditional technique of modifying the molecular structure of the constituents, but also try to exploit collective electronic effects.
AB - The electronic structure of terpyrimidinethiols is investigated by means of density-functional theory calculations for isolated molecules and monolayers. In the transition from molecule to selfassembled monolayer (SAM), we observe that the band gap is substantially reduced, frontier states increasingly localize on opposite sides of the SAM, and this polarization in several instances is in the direction opposite to the polarization of the overall charge density. This behavior can be analyzed by analogy to inorganic semiconductor quantum-wells, which, as the SAMs studied here, can be regarded as semiperiodic systems. There, similar observations are made under the influence of a, typically external, electric field and are known as the quantum-confined Stark effect. Without any external perturbation, in oligopyrimidine SAMs one encounters an energy gradient that is generated by the dipole moments of the pyrimidine repeat units. It is particularly strong, reaching values of about 1.6 eV/nm, which corresponds to a substantial electric field of 1.6 × 10 7 V/cm. Close-lying σ-and π-states turn out to be a particular complication for a reliable description of the present systems, as their order is influenced not only by the docking groups and bonding to the metal, but also by the chosen computational approach. In the latter context we demonstrate that deliberately picking a hybrid functional allows avoiding pitfalls due to the infamous self-interaction error. Our results show that when aiming to build a monolayer with a specific electronic structure one can not only resort to the traditional technique of modifying the molecular structure of the constituents, but also try to exploit collective electronic effects.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=80555141243&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/ja203579c
DO - 10.1021/ja203579c
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 21955058
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 133
SP - 18634
EP - 18645
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 46
ER -