As the electronics industry is integrating more and more new molecules to utilize them in logic circuits and memories to achieve ultra-high efficiency and device density, many organic structures emerged as promising candidates either in conjunction with or as an alternative to conventional semiconducting materials such as but not limited to silicon. Owing to rotaxane's mechanically interlocked molecular structure consisting of a dumbbell-shaped molecule threaded through a macrocycle, they could be excellent nanomachines in molecular switches and memory applications. As a nanomachine, the macrocycle of rotaxane can move reversibly between two stations along its axis under external stimuli, resulting in two stable molecular configurations known as "ON" and "OFF" states of the controllable switch with distinct resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs VLSI technology is shifting from microelectronics to nanoelectronics era, bi-stable [2]rotaxane emerges as a promising candidate for molecular electronics. A typical voltage-driven [2]rotaxane consists of a cyclobis-(paraquat-p-phenylene) macrocycle encircling a dumbbell shape molecular chain and moving between two stations on the chain: tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) and 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP). As a molecular switch, the macrocycle can move reversibly between two stations along its axis with appropriate driving voltage, resulting in two stable molecular conformational states with distinct high and low resistance.
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