Multimode vibrational effects in single molecule conductance: A nonequilibrium Green's function approach
Abstract
The role of multimode vibrational dynamics in electron transport through single molecule junctions is investigated. The study is based on a generic model, which describes charge transport through a single molecule that is attached to metal leads. To address vibrationally-coupled electron transport, we employ a nonequilibrium Green's function approach that extends a method recently proposed by Galperin et al. [Phys. Rev. B 73, 045314 (2006)] to multiple vibrational modes. The methodology is applied to two systems: a generic model with two vibrational degrees of freedom and benzenedibutanethiolate covalently bound to gold electrodes. The results show that the coupling to multiple vibrational modes can have a significant effect on the conductance of a molecular junction. In particular, we demonstrate the effect of electronically induced coupling between different vibrational modes and study nonequilibrium vibrational effects by calculating the current-induced excitation of vibrational modes.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.0801.3602,
title = {Multimode vibrational effects in single molecule conductance: A nonequilibrium Green's function approach},
author = {R. Härtle and C. Benesch and M. Thoss},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0801.3602},
year = {2010}
}
Comments
31 pages, 10 figures