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Molecular electronic chirality in copper phthalocyanine induced via twisted π-π stacking on bilayer graphene.
PubMed
Authors: Qin HJ, Sun RJ, Liu JJ, Liao WA, Wang DB, Yu J, Leng TH, Liu CF, Zhang WH, Fu YS
Year
2026
Paper ID
9873
Status
Peer-reviewed
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
149
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Electronic chirality within single molecules constitutes an intriguing phenomenon in quantum chemistry, whose inducing mechanism however remains underexplored. Here, we report a distinct formation mechanism for electronic chirality in CuPc molecules adsorbed on bilayer graphene on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite, as incurred via twisted π-π stacking. Scanning tunneling microscopy measurements unveil that CuPc molecules exhibit prominent chirality in morphology at low biases, but restore their D symmetry at large biases, demonstrating the chirality is electronic origin. With tip manipulations, the two enantiomers of CuPc can be reversibly switched. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the electronic chirality arises from π-π hybridization between CuPc and graphene, leading to asymmetric charge distribution. The chiral configuration is determined by adsorption sites and rotation angles relative to graphene, in agreement with experimental observations. This work uncovers a π-π hybridization mechanism for driving electronic chirality, providing a platform for designing chiral molecular electronic devices.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Electronic chirality within single molecules constitutes an intriguing phenomenon in quantum chemistry, whose inducing mechanism however remains underexplored.
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