Fig. 3 of US patent no. 5,985,183 showing piezoresistive gauge factor as a function of ruthenium oxide content.[1]
A somewhat similar mechanical affect on conductance was found much earlier, in 1856, by William Thomson (Lord Kelvin), of the eponymous temperature scale. Kelvin found the piezoresistive effect, a change in resistance of metals with applied stress caused merely by a change in their shape. For a bar-shaped conductor, the resistance increases with length and decreases with cross-sectional area, and this was the effect that Kelvin saw.
Piezoresistance is much different for semiconductor crystals, as discovered by Charles S. Smith of Bell Labs in 1954.[2] The piezoresistive effect he saw was much greater than a geometry change could explain. As Smith conjectured, "This so called electron transfer effect arises in the structure of the energy bands of these semiconductors..." The situation is that the stress causes a redistribution of charge carriers of different mobilities.
Nowadays, "nano" is the name of the game, so it's no wonder that piezoresistance has been reduced to its smallest possible dimension. An international team from Arizona State University (Tempe, Arizona), the University of Barcelona (Barcelona, Spain), Fudan University (Shanghai, China) and the Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research (Mainz, Germany), led by Nongjian Tao of Arizona State University, has demonstrated the piezoresistance of a single molecule of pentaphenylene.[3-4]
I've termed this the "piezomolecular" effect, but you won't find anything piezomolecular if you search Google. It's a word that I invented, a neologism. Yes, what this research team found is piezoresistance, but I don't think the word, piezoresistive, adequately captures what they've done. We could call it the "LCAO piezoresistive effect," which is descriptive, but I don't think it would have popular appeal.
I'm not ashamed of my presumption, since physicists invent words all the time. There is, of course, the example of Gell-Mann's quarks. A recent example is David Mermin, who named the geometric pattern on the surface of one of the phases of superfluid 3He a "boojum."[5] Mermin lifted the term from Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark," just like Gell-Mann found quark in Finnegans Wake by James Joyce. My term is much less creative.
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| A molecule of pentaphenylene held between two gold electrodes passes an electrical current. Source: Arizona State University.[4] | Mechanical strain applied to the molecule affects the overlap of atomic orbitals and the conductivity. Source: Arizona State University.[4] |