The Single-Molecule Conductance and Electrochemical Electron-Transfer Rate Are Related by a Power Law
2013
This study examines quantitative correlations between molecular conductances and standard electrochemical rate constants for alkanes and peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligomers as a function of the length, structure, and charge transport mechanism. The experimental data show a power-law relationship between conductances and charge transfer rates within a given class of molecules with the same bridge chemistry, and a lack of correlation when a more diverse group of molecules is compared, in contrast with some theoretical predictions. Surprisingly, the PNA duplexes exhibit the lowest charge-transfer rates and the highest molecular conductances. The nonlinear rate–conductance relationships for structures with the same bridging chemistries are attributed to differences in the charge-mediation characteristics of the molecular bridge, energy barrier shifts and electronic dephasing, in the two different experimental settings.
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