Controlled switching of a single CuPc molecule on Cu(111) at low temperature
Date Issued
2019-01-01
Author(s)
Fremy-Koch, Sweetlana
DOI
10.1103/physrevb.100.155427
Abstract
Low temperature measurements of the tunneling current as a function of the applied bias voltage have been performed on a dense constant-height grid above individual copper phthalocyanine molecules adsorbed on a Cu(111) surface. By appropriate tuning of the applied bias, the molecule can be reversibly switched between two configurations in which pairs of opposite maxima appear rotated by 90 ∘ in the tunneling current map. The underlying conformations are revealed by density functional calculations including van der Waals interactions: a C 2 v symmetric ground state and two energetically equivalent states, in which the molecule is twisted and rotated around its center by ± 7 ∘ . For tip biases above 200 mV position-dependent current switching is observed, as in previous measurements of telegraph noise [Schaffert et al. , Nat. Mater. 12 , 223 (2013) ]. In a small voltage interval around zero the measured current becomes bistable. Switching to a particular state can be initiated by sweeping the voltage past well-defined positive and negative thresholds at certain positions above the molecule or by scanning at constant current and a reduced reverse bias.
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