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Understanding the formation of metal-molecule contact at the microscopic level is the key towards controlling and manipulating atomic scale devices. Employing two isomers of bipyridine, $4, 4^prime$ bipyridine and $2, 2^prime$ bipyridine between gold electrodes, here, we investigate the formation of metal-molecule bond by studying charge transport through single molecular junctions using a mechanically controlled break junction technique at room temperature. While both molecules form molecular junctions during the breaking process, closing traces show the formation of molecular junctions unambiguously for $4, 4^prime$ bipyridine via a conductance jump from the tunneling regime, referred as `jump to molecular contact, being absent for $2, 2^prime$ bipyridine. Through statistical analysis of the data, along with, molecular dynamics and first-principles calculations, we establish that contact formation is strongly connected with the molecular structure of the electrodes as well as how the junction is broken during breaking process, providing important insights for using a single-molecule in an electronic device.
Conductance switching has been reported in many molecular junction devices, but in most cases has not been convincingly explained. We investigate conductance switching in Pt/stearic acid monolayer/Ti devices using pressure-modulated conductance micro
Force and conductance were simultaneously measured during the formation of Cu-C60 and C60-C60 contacts using a combined cryogenic scanning tunneling and atomic force microscope. The contact geometry was controlled with submolecular resolution. The ma
Recent advances in scanning probe techniques rely on the chemical functionalization of the probe-tip termination by a single molecule. The success of this approach opens the tantalizing prospect of introducing spin sensitivity through the functionali
The light emission from a scanning tunneling microscope operated on a Ag(111) surface at 6 K is analyzed from low conductances to values approaching the conductance quantum. Optical spectra recorded at a sample voltages V reveal emission with photon
Interface phonon modes that are generated by several atomic layers at the heterointerface play a major role in the interface thermal conductance for nanoscale high-power devices such as nitride-based high-electron-mobility transistors and light emitt