Abstract

The electronic transport properties of a 4,4'-bipyridine molecule sandwiched between two Au(111) surfaces are studied with a fully self-consistent nonequilibrium Green's-function method combined with the density-functional theory. The 4,4'-bipyridine molecule prefers to adsorb near the hollow site of the Au(111) surface and distorts slightly. The modifications on the electronic structure of the molecule due to the presence of the electrodes are described by the renormalized molecular orbitals, which correspond well to the calculated transmission peaks. The average Fermi level lies close to the lowest unoccupied renormalized molecular orbital, which determines the electronic transport property of the molecular junction under a small bias voltage. The total transmission is contributed by a single channel. The transmission peaks shift with the applied bias voltage, and this behavior depends on the spatial distribution of the renormalized molecular orbitals and the voltage drop along the molecular junction. The shape of the calculated conductance curve of the equilibrium geometric configuration reproduces the main feature of the experimental results, but the value is larger than the measured data by about 6 times. Good agreement with the experimental measurements can be obtained by elongating the molecular junction. The electronic transport behaviors depend strongly on the interface configuration.

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