STM Contrast in Molecules
J. Phys. Chem. B, Vol. 101, No. 50, 1997 10725
nate among electroactive and non-electroactive molecules could
have applications in the design of molecular-scale electronic
devices. The nature of the electron transfer through the
molecules is not clear. Both one-step (resonant tunneling) and
two-step (reduction/oxidation) processes are consistent with our
observations, and further experiments, such as measurement of
the temperature dependence of the currents, are required to
elucidate this point. One might expect the resonant tunneling
contribution to be larger (because it is a first-order process),
but electron interactions and thermal fluctuations may favor the
two-step process. We note that the relative contrast of elec-
troactive molecules far from the reduction potential appears to
be less than that of similar but non-electroactive molecules.
Furthermore, the molecules appear to behave as though all of
the applied potential is dropped across them. Further work is
required to understand these observations.
Figure 8. Calculated dI/dV for the one-step tunneling process (eqs 3
and 4) shown by the crosses and the two-step process (eqs 5, 6, and 7)
shown by the dots. Parameters were E0 ) -0.6 V, λ ) 0.5 V, and R
) 0.5. The solid lines are fits to Gaussians of the form of eq 1.
Model II is more complicated, containing the product of two
molecular densities of states separated by 2λ. The corresponding
maximum is not centered between these peaks but is pulled to
somewhat higher voltages by the rapid increase in current at
high bias. For these parameters, dI/dV is a maximum at about
0.2 V lower bias than for model I. The form of dI/dV is clearly
not Gaussian, but the data are still fitted quite well by a simple
Gaussian (solid line). Thus, within experimental error, we
cannot distinguish these two processes on the basis of our data.
We can use eq 2 and the measured reduction potentials (Table
1) to estimate to position of the peaks in dI/dV as referenced to
the gold Fermi energy. For simplicity, we have used model I
and taken λ to be zero. The results are expressed in terms of
R in Table 2.
Acknowledgment. This work was supported in part by
grants from the National Science Foundation (BIR 9513233),
Molecular Imaging Corporation (TCL96-157C), and AFSOR
(F49620-96-1-0346) (N.T.). We are grateful to Steve Woodward
for assistance in the lab.
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