Artículos de revistas
Electrochemical gating of single osmium molecules tethered to Au surfaces
Fecha
2016-04Registro en:
Herrera, Santiago Esteban; Adam, Catherine; Ricci, Alejandra Marcela; Calvo, Ernesto Julio; Electrochemical gating of single osmium molecules tethered to Au surfaces; Springer; Journal of Solid State Electrochemistry (print); 20; 4; 4-2016; 957-967
1432-8488
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Herrera, Santiago Esteban
Adam, Catherine
Ricci, Alejandra Marcela
Calvo, Ernesto Julio
Resumen
The electrochemical study of electron transport between Au electrodes and the redox molecule Os[(bpy)2(PyCH2 NH2CO-]ClO4 tethered to molecular linkers of different length (1.3 to 2.9 nm) to Au surfaces has shown an exponential decay of the rate constant kET 0 with a slope β = 0.53 consistent with through bond tunneling to the redox center. Electrochemical gating of single osmium molecules in an asymmetric tunneling nano-gap between a Au(111) substrate electrode modified with the redox molecules and a Pt-Ir tip of a scanning tunneling microscope was achieved by independent control of the reference electrode potential in the electrolyte, Eref − Es, and the tip-substrate bias potential, Ebias. Enhanced tunneling current at the osmium complex redox potential was observed as compared to the off resonance set point tunneling current with a linear dependence of the overpotential at maximum current vs. the Ebias. This corresponds to a sequential two-step electron transfer with partial vibration relaxation from the substrate Au(111) to the redox molecule in the nano-gap and from this redox state to the Pt-Ir tip according to the model of Kuznetsov and Ulstrup (J Phys Chem A 104: 11531, 2000). Comparison of short and long linkers of the osmium complex has shown the same two-step ET (electron transfer) behavior due to the long time scale in the complete reduction-oxidation cycle in the electrochemical tunneling spectroscopy (EC-STS) experiment as compared to the time constants for electron transfer for all linker distances, kET 0.