R. Haag et al., Electrical breakdown of aliphatic and aromatic self-assembled monolayers used as nanometer-thick organic dielectrics, J AM CHEM S, 121(34), 1999, pp. 7895-7906
This paper describes a new type of metal-insulator-metal junction based on
self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). The junction consists of a drop of liquid
mercury supporting a SAM, in contact with a flat metal surface (M'), also
supporting a SAM: that is, a Hg-SAM/SAM-M' junction. This junction is stabl
e, easy to assemble, and reproducible: it can generate areas of contact dow
n to 0.01 mm: without photolithography. These properties suggest this junct
ion as a useful "test bed" for experiments in molecular electronics. The ju
nction allowed measurements of electrical properties of SAMs on different m
etals: M' = Ag, Au, Cu, and Hg. The work described here focused on the elec
trical breakdown voltage (BDV, the maximum voltage sustained by the junctio
n). The BDV depends on M' (BDVAg = 3.2 +/- 0.5 V; BDVHg = 3.1 +/- 0.4 V; BD
VCu = 3.0 +/- 0.3 V; BDVAu = 1.5 +/- 0.2 V for SAMs formed from hexadecanet
hiol) and correlates with the organizational parameters of the SAM on M': i
t increases as the packing density increases and the tilt angle decreases.
The BDV also depends on the chain length of the alkanethiol forming the SAM
for the same metal surface (M'). Alkanethiol SAMs on Ag having carbon chai
n lengths longer than C14 can sustain a constant electrical field up to 8 /- 1 x 10(8) V/m. This value for the BDV is similar to that of bulk polyeth
ylene. A survey of SAMs with different chemical structures shows that the B
DV correlates overall with the thickness of the densely packed hydrocarbon
portion of the SAM: aliphatic and aromatic SAMs of the same thickness show
similar BDVs.