Abstract

One of the simplest molecular-scale electronic devices is the molecular rectifier. In spite of considerable efforts aimed at understanding structure-property relationships in these systems, devices with predictable and stable electronic properties are yet to be developed. Here, we demonstrate highly efficient current rectification in a new class of compounds that form self-assembled monolayers on silicon. We achieve this by exploiting the coupling of the molecules with the top electrode which, in turn, controls the position of the relevant molecular orbitals. The molecules consist of a silane anchoring group and a nitrogen-substituted benzene ring, separated by a propyl group and imine linkage, and result from a simple, robust, and high-yield synthetic procedure. We find that when incorporated in molecular diodes, these compounds can rectify current by as much as 3 orders of magnitude, depending on their structure, with a maximum rectification ratio of 2635 being obtained in ( E)-1-(4-cyanophenyl)- N-(3-(triethoxysilyl) propyl)methanimine (average Ravg = 1683 ± 458, at an applied voltage of 2 V). This performance is on par with that of the best molecular rectifiers obtained on metallic electrodes, but it has the advantage of lower cost and more efficient integration with current silicon technologies. The development of molecular rectifiers on silicon may yield hybrid systems that can expand the use of silicon toward novel functionalities governed by the molecular species grafted onto its surface.

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