O'Driscoll Luke J, Bryce Martin R
Department of Chemistry, Durham University, Lower Mountjoy, Stockton Road, Durham, DH1 3LE, UK.
Nanoscale. 2021 Jan 21;13(2):1103-1123. doi: 10.1039/d0nr07819k.
The ability to easily and reliably predict quantum interference (QI) behaviour would facilitate the design of functional molecular wires with potential applications in switches, transistors and thermoelectric devices. A variety of predictive methods exist, but with the exception of computationally-expensive DFT-based charge transport simulations, these often fail to account for the experimentally observed behaviour of molecules that differ significantly in structure from alternant polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. By considering a range of prior studies we have developed an extension to predictive "curly arrow rules". We show that, in most cases, these extended curly arrow rules (ECARs) can rationalise the type of QI exhibited by conjugated molecular wires containing heteroatoms, cross-conjugation and/or non-alternant structures. ECARs provide a straightforward "pen-and-paper" method to predict whether a molecular wire will display constructive, destructive or "shifted destructive" QI, i.e. whether or not its transmission function would be expected to show an antiresonance, and if this antiresonance would occur close to the Fermi energy or be shifted elsewhere.
能够轻松且可靠地预测量子干涉(QI)行为将有助于设计功能性分子导线,这些导线在开关、晶体管和热电器件中具有潜在应用。存在多种预测方法,但除了基于密度泛函理论(DFT)的计算成本高昂的电荷传输模拟外,这些方法往往无法解释结构与交替多环芳烃有显著差异的分子的实验观测行为。通过考虑一系列先前的研究,我们开发了一种对预测性“弯箭头规则”的扩展方法。我们表明,在大多数情况下,这些扩展的弯箭头规则(ECARs)能够解释含杂原子、交叉共轭和/或非交替结构的共轭分子导线所表现出的QI类型。ECARs提供了一种直接的“纸笔”方法来预测分子导线是否会显示相长、相消或“移位相消”QI,即其传输函数是否预期会显示反共振,以及这种反共振是否会出现在费米能附近或移位到其他地方。