Molecularly inherent voltage-controlled conductance switching
- PMID: 15654344
- DOI: 10.1038/nmat1309
Molecularly inherent voltage-controlled conductance switching
Abstract
Molecular electronics has been proposed as a pathway for high-density nanoelectronic devices. This pathway involves the development of a molecular memory device based on reversible switching of a molecule between two conducting states in response to a trigger, such as an applied voltage. Here we demonstrate that voltage-triggered switching is indeed a molecular phenomenon by carrying out studies on the same molecule using three different experimental configurations-scanning tunnelling microscopy, crossed-wire junction, and magnetic-bead junction. We also demonstrate that voltage-triggered switching is distinctly different from stochastic switching, essentially a transient (time-dependent) phenomenon that is independent of the applied voltage.
Comment in
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Molecular electronics: approaching reality.Nat Mater. 2005 Feb;4(2):111-3. doi: 10.1038/nmat1313. Nat Mater. 2005. PMID: 15689945 No abstract available.
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