Robust quantum engineering of current flow in carbon nanostructures at room temperature

Gaetano Calogero*, Isaac Alcón*, Onurcan Kaya, Nick Papior, Aron W. Cummings*, Mads Brandbyge, Stephan Roche

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Bottom-up on-surface synthesis enables the fabrication of carbon nanostructures with atomic precision. Good examples are graphene nanoribbons (GNRs), 1D conjugated polymers, and nanoporous graphenes (NPGs), which are gathering increasing attention for future carbon nanoelectronics. A key step is the ability to manipulate current flow within these nanomaterials. Destructive quantum interference (QI), long studied in the field of single-molecule electronics, has been proposed as the most effective way to achieve such control with molecular-scale precision. However, for practical applications, it is essential that such QI-engineering remains effective near or above room temperature. To assess this important point, here we combine large-scale molecular dynamics simulations and quantum transport calculations and focus our study on NPGs formed as arrays of laterally bonded GNRs. By considering various NPGs with different inter-GNR chemical connections we disentangle the different factors determining electronic transport in these carbon nanomaterials at 300 K. Our findings unequivocally demonstrate that QI survives at room temperature, with thermal vibrations weakly restricting current flow along GNRs while completely blocking transport across GNRs. Our results thus pave the way towards the future realization of QI-engineered carbon nanocircuitry operating at room temperature, which is a fundamental step towards carbon-based nanoelectronics and quantum technologies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number119950
JournalCarbon
Volume234
Number of pages9
ISSN0008-6223
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • 2D materials
  • Green's functions
  • Nanoelectronics
  • Nanoporous graphenes
  • Quantum transport
  • Quantum-interference engineering

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