Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

Standard

Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox. / Hamill, Joseph M.; Bro-Jørgensen, William; Balogh, Zoltán; Li, Haixing; Leitherer, Susanne; Solomon, David; Halbritter, András; Solomon, Gemma.

arxiv.org, 2024.

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

Harvard

Hamill, JM, Bro-Jørgensen, W, Balogh, Z, Li, H, Leitherer, S, Solomon, D, Halbritter, A & Solomon, G 2024 'Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox' arxiv.org. <https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.12769>

APA

Hamill, J. M., Bro-Jørgensen, W., Balogh, Z., Li, H., Leitherer, S., Solomon, D., Halbritter, A., & Solomon, G. (2024). Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox. arxiv.org. https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.12769

Vancouver

Hamill JM, Bro-Jørgensen W, Balogh Z, Li H, Leitherer S, Solomon D o.a. Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox. arxiv.org. 2024 jan. 23.

Author

Hamill, Joseph M. ; Bro-Jørgensen, William ; Balogh, Zoltán ; Li, Haixing ; Leitherer, Susanne ; Solomon, David ; Halbritter, András ; Solomon, Gemma. / Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox. arxiv.org, 2024.

Bibtex

@techreport{9cc4a2619ab746fb85ea2170a181f9b8,
title = "Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox",
abstract = " Structural breaks occur in timeseries data across a broad range of fields, from economics to nanosciences. For measurements of single-molecule break junctions, structural breaks in conductance versus displacement data occur when the molecular junction ruptures. This moment is significant because the molecule is likely in its most extended geometry, and therefore resembles most closely the geometry used in theoretical predictions. Conventional single-molecule break junction data analysis, on the other hand, typically uses the entire molecular plateau to estimate the single-molecule conductance, which skews the estimate when the plateau is sloped. Borrowing from econometrics, where the study of structural breaks is well established, we present change point detection (CPD) as a tool to search for junction rupture in single-molecule break junction data, and improve estimates in single-molecule conductance. We demonstrate that using CPD instead of the conventional 1D conductance histogram to determine the mean molecular conductance yields a standard deviation in the estimate of typically half that of the conventional approach, greatly improving accuracy. We apply CPD to three separate data sets, two on 4,4'-bipyridine and one on a silane, two at room temperature and one at 4 K, two in one lab, one in another, to show the wide applicability of even the simplest of CPD algorithms: the Chow test. This versatility and better accuracy will propagate into more accurate theoretical simulations. These improved metrics, in turn, will further improve any downstream analyses, including all emerging machine learning approaches. ",
keywords = "cond-mat.mes-hall, cond-mat.soft",
author = "Hamill, {Joseph M.} and William Bro-J{\o}rgensen and Zolt{\'a}n Balogh and Haixing Li and Susanne Leitherer and David Solomon and Andr{\'a}s Halbritter and Gemma Solomon",
note = "33 pages and 11 figures and supporting material of 8 pages and 3 figures",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "23",
language = "Udefineret/Ukendt",
publisher = "arxiv.org",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "arxiv.org",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox

AU - Hamill, Joseph M.

AU - Bro-Jørgensen, William

AU - Balogh, Zoltán

AU - Li, Haixing

AU - Leitherer, Susanne

AU - Solomon, David

AU - Halbritter, András

AU - Solomon, Gemma

N1 - 33 pages and 11 figures and supporting material of 8 pages and 3 figures

PY - 2024/1/23

Y1 - 2024/1/23

N2 - Structural breaks occur in timeseries data across a broad range of fields, from economics to nanosciences. For measurements of single-molecule break junctions, structural breaks in conductance versus displacement data occur when the molecular junction ruptures. This moment is significant because the molecule is likely in its most extended geometry, and therefore resembles most closely the geometry used in theoretical predictions. Conventional single-molecule break junction data analysis, on the other hand, typically uses the entire molecular plateau to estimate the single-molecule conductance, which skews the estimate when the plateau is sloped. Borrowing from econometrics, where the study of structural breaks is well established, we present change point detection (CPD) as a tool to search for junction rupture in single-molecule break junction data, and improve estimates in single-molecule conductance. We demonstrate that using CPD instead of the conventional 1D conductance histogram to determine the mean molecular conductance yields a standard deviation in the estimate of typically half that of the conventional approach, greatly improving accuracy. We apply CPD to three separate data sets, two on 4,4'-bipyridine and one on a silane, two at room temperature and one at 4 K, two in one lab, one in another, to show the wide applicability of even the simplest of CPD algorithms: the Chow test. This versatility and better accuracy will propagate into more accurate theoretical simulations. These improved metrics, in turn, will further improve any downstream analyses, including all emerging machine learning approaches.

AB - Structural breaks occur in timeseries data across a broad range of fields, from economics to nanosciences. For measurements of single-molecule break junctions, structural breaks in conductance versus displacement data occur when the molecular junction ruptures. This moment is significant because the molecule is likely in its most extended geometry, and therefore resembles most closely the geometry used in theoretical predictions. Conventional single-molecule break junction data analysis, on the other hand, typically uses the entire molecular plateau to estimate the single-molecule conductance, which skews the estimate when the plateau is sloped. Borrowing from econometrics, where the study of structural breaks is well established, we present change point detection (CPD) as a tool to search for junction rupture in single-molecule break junction data, and improve estimates in single-molecule conductance. We demonstrate that using CPD instead of the conventional 1D conductance histogram to determine the mean molecular conductance yields a standard deviation in the estimate of typically half that of the conventional approach, greatly improving accuracy. We apply CPD to three separate data sets, two on 4,4'-bipyridine and one on a silane, two at room temperature and one at 4 K, two in one lab, one in another, to show the wide applicability of even the simplest of CPD algorithms: the Chow test. This versatility and better accuracy will propagate into more accurate theoretical simulations. These improved metrics, in turn, will further improve any downstream analyses, including all emerging machine learning approaches.

KW - cond-mat.mes-hall

KW - cond-mat.soft

M3 - Preprint

BT - Improving single-molecule conductance measurements with change point detection from the econometrics toolbox

PB - arxiv.org

ER -

ID: 383314216