Abstract
The metal-electrode interface is key to unlocking emergent behaviour in all organic electrified systems,
from battery technology to molecular electronics. In the latter, interfacial engineering has enabled
efficient transport, higher device stability, and novel functionality. Mechanoresistivity – the change in
electrical behaviour in response to a mechanical stimulus and a pathway to extremely sensitive force
sensors – is amongst the most studied phenomena in molecular electronics, and the molecule-electrode
interface plays a pivotal role in its emergence, reproducibility, and magnitude. In this contribution, we
show that organometallic molecular wires incorporating a Pt(II) cation show mechanoresistive
behaviour of exceptional magnitude, with conductance modulations of more than three orders of
magnitude upon compression by as little as 1 nm. We synthesised series of cyclometalated Pt(II)
molecular wires, and used scanning tunnelling microscopy – break junction techniques to characterise
their electromechanical behaviour. Mechanoresistivity arises from an interaction between the Pt(II)
cation and the Au electrode triggered by mechanical compression of the single-molecule device, and
theoretical modelling confirms this hypothesis. Our study provides a new tool for the design of functional
molecular wires by exploiting previously unreported ion-metal interactions in single-molecule devices,
and develops a new framework for the development of mechanoresistive molecular junctions.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Information
Description
Synthetic procedures, technical details, and additional data supporting the claims of the manuscript.
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