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Assembly, structure and thermoelectric properties of 1,1’-dialkynylferrocene ‘hinges’

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Assembly, structure and thermoelectric properties of 1,1’-dialkynylferrocene ‘hinges’. / Wilkinson, Luke A.; Bennett, Troy; Grace, Iain et al.
In: Chemical Science, Vol. 13, No. 28, 28.07.2022, p. 8380–8387.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Wilkinson LA, Bennett T, Grace I, Hamill J, Wang X, Au-Yong S et al. Assembly, structure and thermoelectric properties of 1,1’-dialkynylferrocene ‘hinges’. Chemical Science. 2022 Jul 28;13(28):8380–8387. Epub 2022 Jun 27. doi: 10.1039/D2SC00861K

Author

Wilkinson, Luke A. ; Bennett, Troy ; Grace, Iain et al. / Assembly, structure and thermoelectric properties of 1,1’-dialkynylferrocene ‘hinges’. In: Chemical Science. 2022 ; Vol. 13, No. 28. pp. 8380–8387.

Bibtex

@article{d47c625e8c4f497ab3088df3d731a058,
title = "Assembly, structure and thermoelectric properties of 1,1{\textquoteright}-dialkynylferrocene {\textquoteleft}hinges{\textquoteright}",
abstract = "Dialkynylferrocenes exhibit attractive electronic and rotational features that make them ideal candidates for use in molecular electronic applications. However previous works have primarily focussed on single-molecule studies, with limited opportunities to translate these features into devices. In this report, we utilise a variety of techniques to examine both the geometric and electronic structure of a range of 1,1{\textquoteright}-dialkynylferrocene molecules, as either single-molecules, or as self-assembled monolayers. Previous single molecule studies have shown that similar molecules can adopt an {\textquoteleft}open{\textquoteright} conformation. However, in this work, DFT calculations, STM-BJ experiments and AFM imaging reveal that these molecules prefer to occupy a {\textquoteleft}hairpin{\textquoteright} conformation, where both alkynes point towards the metal surface. Interestingly we find that only one of the terminal anchor groups binds to the surface, though both the presence, and nature of the second alkyne affects the thermoelectric properties of these systems. First, the secondary alkyne acts to affect the position of the frontier molecular orbitals, leading to increases in Seebeck coefficient. Secondly, theoretical calculations suggested that rotating the secondary alkyne away from the surface acts to modulate thermoelectric properties. This work represents the first of its kind to examine the assembly of dialkynylferrocenes, providing valuable information about both their structure and electronic properties, as well as unveiling new ways in which both of these properties can be controlled.",
author = "Wilkinson, {Luke A.} and Troy Bennett and Iain Grace and Joseph Hamill and Xintai Wang and Sophie Au-Yong and Ali Ismael and Samuel Jarvis and Songjun Hou and Tim Albrecht and Cohen, {Lesley F.} and Colin Lambert and Benjamin Robinson and Long, {Nicholas J.}",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1039/D2SC00861K",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "8380–8387",
journal = "Chemical Science",
issn = "2041-6520",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "28",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Assembly, structure and thermoelectric properties of 1,1’-dialkynylferrocene ‘hinges’

AU - Wilkinson, Luke A.

AU - Bennett, Troy

AU - Grace, Iain

AU - Hamill, Joseph

AU - Wang, Xintai

AU - Au-Yong, Sophie

AU - Ismael, Ali

AU - Jarvis, Samuel

AU - Hou, Songjun

AU - Albrecht, Tim

AU - Cohen, Lesley F.

AU - Lambert, Colin

AU - Robinson, Benjamin

AU - Long, Nicholas J.

PY - 2022/7/28

Y1 - 2022/7/28

N2 - Dialkynylferrocenes exhibit attractive electronic and rotational features that make them ideal candidates for use in molecular electronic applications. However previous works have primarily focussed on single-molecule studies, with limited opportunities to translate these features into devices. In this report, we utilise a variety of techniques to examine both the geometric and electronic structure of a range of 1,1’-dialkynylferrocene molecules, as either single-molecules, or as self-assembled monolayers. Previous single molecule studies have shown that similar molecules can adopt an ‘open’ conformation. However, in this work, DFT calculations, STM-BJ experiments and AFM imaging reveal that these molecules prefer to occupy a ‘hairpin’ conformation, where both alkynes point towards the metal surface. Interestingly we find that only one of the terminal anchor groups binds to the surface, though both the presence, and nature of the second alkyne affects the thermoelectric properties of these systems. First, the secondary alkyne acts to affect the position of the frontier molecular orbitals, leading to increases in Seebeck coefficient. Secondly, theoretical calculations suggested that rotating the secondary alkyne away from the surface acts to modulate thermoelectric properties. This work represents the first of its kind to examine the assembly of dialkynylferrocenes, providing valuable information about both their structure and electronic properties, as well as unveiling new ways in which both of these properties can be controlled.

AB - Dialkynylferrocenes exhibit attractive electronic and rotational features that make them ideal candidates for use in molecular electronic applications. However previous works have primarily focussed on single-molecule studies, with limited opportunities to translate these features into devices. In this report, we utilise a variety of techniques to examine both the geometric and electronic structure of a range of 1,1’-dialkynylferrocene molecules, as either single-molecules, or as self-assembled monolayers. Previous single molecule studies have shown that similar molecules can adopt an ‘open’ conformation. However, in this work, DFT calculations, STM-BJ experiments and AFM imaging reveal that these molecules prefer to occupy a ‘hairpin’ conformation, where both alkynes point towards the metal surface. Interestingly we find that only one of the terminal anchor groups binds to the surface, though both the presence, and nature of the second alkyne affects the thermoelectric properties of these systems. First, the secondary alkyne acts to affect the position of the frontier molecular orbitals, leading to increases in Seebeck coefficient. Secondly, theoretical calculations suggested that rotating the secondary alkyne away from the surface acts to modulate thermoelectric properties. This work represents the first of its kind to examine the assembly of dialkynylferrocenes, providing valuable information about both their structure and electronic properties, as well as unveiling new ways in which both of these properties can be controlled.

U2 - 10.1039/D2SC00861K

DO - 10.1039/D2SC00861K

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 8380

EP - 8387

JO - Chemical Science

JF - Chemical Science

SN - 2041-6520

IS - 28

ER -