Thanks a lot, Petr and Anders.
Yes, the central region includes the left and right electrode extensions, and also another concept is the screening length.
I got to know the VNL-ATK uses the ballistic approximation to do the transport calculation, so the length along the transport direction does not affect so much to the computational workload. I simply want to compare the I-V curves, specifically the different responses for current before and after the adsorption. As you can seen in Figure 4 the paper above, there is a discrepancy (although it might not be large) for the current values after the adsorption of NH3, but barely no difference observed in my simulation results.
Based on your answer, my setup for the simulation seems okay, and in this way, I wonder if I could enlarge the differences, i.e., increase the molecule density in the transport direction (Z) or periodic direction (B) (suppose A is the vacuum)? Because in the experiment, there is a large reduction in the resistance, for this particular molecule is more than 50% reduction.