Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.123, No.38, 8096-8102, 2019
Molecular Junctions Inspired by Nature: Electrical Conduction through Noncovalent Nanobelts
Charge transport occurs in a range of biomolecular systems, whose structures have covalent and noncovalent bonds. Understanding from these systems have yet to translate into molecular junction devices. We design junctions which have hydrogen-bonds between the edges of a series of prototype noncovalent nanobelts (NCNs) and vary the number of donor-acceptors to study their electrical properties. From frontier molecular orbitals (FMOs) and projected density of state (DOS) calculations, we found these NCN dimer junctions to have low HOMO-LUMO gaps and states at the Fermi level, suggesting these are metallic-like systems. Their conductance properties were studied with nonequilibrium Green's functions density functional theory (NEGF-DFT) and was found to decrease with cooperative H-bonding, that is, the conductance decreased as the alternating donor-acceptors around the nanobelts attenuates to a uniform distribution in the H-bonding arrays. The latter gave the highest conductance of 51.3 x 10(-6) S and the Seebeck coefficient showed n-type (-36 to -39 mu V K-1) behavior, while the lower conductors with alternating H-bonds are p-type (49.7 to 204 mu V K-1). In addition, the NCNs have appreciable binding energies (19.8 to 46.1 kcal mol(-1)), implying they could form self-assembled monolayer (SAM) heterojunctions leading to a polymeric network for long-range charge transport.