Renormalization of molecular electronic levels at metal-molecule interfaces

Phys Rev Lett. 2006 Nov 24;97(21):216405. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.216405. Epub 2006 Nov 22.

Abstract

The electronic structure of benzene on graphite (0001) is computed using the GW approximation for the electron self-energy. The benzene quasiparticle energy gap is predicted to be 7.2 eV on graphite, substantially reduced from its calculated gas-phase value of 10.5 eV. This decrease is caused by a change in electronic correlation energy, an effect completely absent from the corresponding Kohn-Sham gap. For weakly coupled molecules, this correlation energy change can be described as a surface polarization effect. A classical image potential model illustrates the impact for other conjugated molecules on graphite.