Modeling Nonreactive Molecule−Surface Systems on Experimentally Relevant Time and Length Scales: Dynamics and Conductance of Polyfluorene on Au(111)

ORAL

Abstract

We propose a computationally efficient strategy to accurately model nonreactive molecule–surface interactions that adapts density functional theory calculations with the Tkatchenko–Scheffler scheme for van der Waals interactions into a simple classical force field. The resulting force field requires just two adjustable parameters per atom type that are needed to capture short-range and polarization interactions. The developed strategy allows for classical molecular dynamics simulation of molecules on surfaces with the accuracy of high-level electronic structure methods but for system sizes (103 to 107 atoms) and timescales (picoseconds to microseconds) that go well beyond what can be achieved with first-principles methods. Parameters for H, sp2 C, and O on Au(111) are developed and employed to atomistically model experiments that measure the conductance of a single polyfluorene on Au(111) as a continuous function of its length. The simulations qualitatively capture both the gross and fine features of the observed conductance decay during initial junction elongation and lead to a revised atomistic understanding of the experiment.

Z. Li, A. Tkatchenko and I. Franco, J. Phys. Chem. Lett., 9, 1140 (2018)

Presenters

  • Zhi Li

    • University of Rochester

Authors

  • Zhi Li

    • University of Rochester
  • Alexandre Tkatchenko

    • University of Luxembourg
    • FSTC, University of Luxembourg
    • Physics and Materials Science Research Unit, University of Luxembourg
    • Physics and Materials Science Reasearch Unit, University of Luxembourg
    • Physics and Materials Science Research Unit, Université du Luxembourg
  • Ignacio Franco

    • University of Rochester
    • Chemistry, University of Rochester