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Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and Nanostructures,” July 31, 2009 Charles Stafford
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Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

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Page 1: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions

INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and Nanostructures,” July 31, 2009

Charles Stafford

Page 2: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

1. Fundamental challenges of nanoelectronics(a physicist’s perspective)

Fabrication:

Lithography → self-assembly?

For ultrasmall devices, even single-atom variations from device to device (or in device packaging) could lead to unacceptable variationsin device characteristics → environmental sensitivity.

Contacts/interconnects to ultrasmall devices.

Switching mechanism:

Raising/lowering energy barrier necessitates dissipation of minimumenergy kBT per cycle → extreme power dissipation at ultrahigh device densities.

Tunneling & barrier fluctuations in nanoscale devices.

Page 3: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Molecular electronics

Fabrication: large numbers of identical “devices” can be readily synthesized with atomic precision. (Making the contacts is the hard part!)

But does not (necessarilly) solve fundamental problem of switching mechanism.

Page 4: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Single-molecule junction ≈ ultrasmall quantum dot

Similarities and differences:

Typically, π-orbitals of the carbon atoms are the itinerant degrees of freedom.

Charging energy of a single π-orbital: U ~ 9eV.

Charging energy of a benzene molecule: ‹U› ~ 5eV.

Nearest-neighbor π-π hopping integral: t ~ 2 – 3eV.

Lead-molecule coupling: Γ ~ 0.5eV (small parameter?).

Electronic structure unique for each molecule---not universal!

Page 5: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Alternative switching mechanism: Quantum interference

David M. Cardamone, CAS & S. Mazumdar, Nano Letters 6, 2422 (2006); CAS, D. M. Cardamone & S. Mazumdar, Nanotechnology 18, 424014 (2007); U.S. Patent Application, Serial No. 60/784,503 (2007)

(a) Phase difference of paths 1 and 2: kF 2d = π → destructive interference blocks flow of current from E to C.

All possible Feynman paths cancel exactly in pairs.

(b) Increasing coupling to third terminal introduces new paths that do not cancel, allowing current to flow from E to C.

Page 6: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

2. The nonequilibrium many-body problem

•Mean-field calculations based on density-functional theory are the dominant paradigm in quantum chemistry, including molecular junction transport.

•They are unable to account for charge quantization effects (Coulomb blockade) in single-molecule junctions!

•HOMO-LUMO gap not accurately described; no distinction of transport vs. optical gap.

•Many-body effects beyond the mean-field level must be included for a quantitative theory of transport in molecular heterojunctions.

•To date, only a few special solutions in certain limiting cases (e.g., Anderson model; Kondo effect) have been obtained to the nonequilibrium many-body problem.

•There is a need for a general approach that includes the electronic structure of the molecule.

Page 7: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Nonequilibrium Green’s functions

Page 8: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Real-time Green’s functions

Page 9: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Molecular Junction Hamiltonian

Coulomb interaction (localized orthonormal basis):

Leads modeled as noninteracting Fermi gases:

Lead-molecule coupling (electrostatic coupling included in Hmol(1)):

Page 10: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Molecular Junction Green’s Functions

All (steady-state) physical observables of the molecular junctioncan be expressed in terms of G and G<.

Dyson equation:

Coulomb self-energy must be calculated approximately.

G obeys the equation of motion:

Once G is known, G< can be determined by analytic continuationon the Keldysh contour.

Tunneling self-energy:

Page 11: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Electric and Thermal Currents

Tunneling width matrix:

Page 12: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Elastic and inelastic contributions to the current

Page 13: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Elastic transport: linear response

Page 14: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

3. Application to specific molecules:Effective π-electron molecular Hamiltonian

For the purpose of this talk we consider conjugated organic molecules.

• Transport due primarily to itinerantelectrons.• Sigma band is filled and doesn’t contribute appreciably to

transport.

Effective charge operator, including polarization charges induced by lead voltages:

† †ol

,m ,

,

ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆˆH1

2, .n n n n m nmn nm m

n nm nmntd d n d d U Q QH c

† 1nn n n

n

CQ d d

e

Parameters from fitting electronic spectra of benzene, biphenyl, and trans-stilbene up to 8-10eV:

Accurate to ~1% U=8.9eV,t=2.64eV,ε=1.28

2

11 ( /Ang)

nm nm nm

nm

UU U

R

Castleton C.W.M., Barford W., J. Chem. Phys. Vol 17 No. 8 (2002)

Page 15: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Enhanced thermoelectric effects near transmission nodes

Page 16: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Effect of a finite minimum transmission

Page 17: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

4. The Coulomb self-energy

Page 18: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Sequential-tunneling limit:ΣC

(0)

Nonequilibrium steady-state probabilities determined by detailed balance:

Page 19: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Correction to the Coulomb self-energy

Page 20: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Self-consistent Hartree-Fock correction to theCoulomb self-energy of a diatomic molecule

•Narrowing of transmission resonances;•No shift of transmission peak or node positions;•No qualitative effect on transmission phase;•Correction small in (experimentally relevant) cotunneling regime.

Page 21: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Coulomb blockade in a diatomic molecule

Page 22: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Higher-order corrections to the Coulomb self-energy: RPA

Page 23: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

5. Results for 1,4-benzenedithiol-Au junctions

Page 24: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Determining the lead-molecule coupling: thermopower

• Experimentally the BDT junction’s Seebeck coefficient is found to be 7.0.2V/K• Baheti et al, Nano Letters Vol 8 No 2 (2008)

Find that Au-0 =-3.22±.04eV, about 1.5eV above the HOMO level (hole dominated)• Experimentally the linear-conductance of BDT is reported to be 0.011G0

(2e2/h)•Xiaoyin Xiao, Bingqian Xu, and N.J Tao. Nano-letters Vol 4, No. 2 (2004)

• Comparison with calculated linear-response gives =.63±.02eV

• We can express the thermopower in terms of the transmission probability

1f

T E E dEE

SfeT T E dEE

Page 25: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Differential conductance spectrum of a benzene(1,4)dithiol-Au junction

•Junction charge quantized within ‘molecular diamonds.’•Transmission nodes due to quantum interference.•Resonant tunneling through molecular excited states at finite bias.

Justin P. Bergfield & CAS, Physical Review B 79, 245125 (2009)

Page 26: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Resonant tunneling through molecular excitons

Justin P. Bergfield & CAS, Physical Review B 79, 245125 (2009)

Page 27: Many-body theory of electric and thermal transport in single-molecule junctions INT Program “From Femtoscience to Nanoscience: Nuclei, Quantum Dots and.

Conclusions•Electron transport in single-molecule junctions is a key example of a nanosystem far from equilibrium, and poses a challenging nonequilibrium quantum many-body problem.

•Transport through single molecules can be controlled by exploiting quantum interference due to molecular symmetry.

•Large enhancement of thermoelectric effects predicted at transmission nodes arising due to destructive quantum interference.

•Open questions:

Corrections to Coulomb self-energy beyond RPA

Fabrication, fabrication, fabrication…