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IBM Shrinks Bit Size To 12 Atoms

Lucas123 writes "IBM researchers say they've been able to shrink the number of iron atoms it takes to store a bit of data from about one million to 12, which could pave the way for storage devices with capacities that are orders of magnitude greater than today's devices. Andreas Heinrich, who led the IBM Research team on the project for five years, said the team used the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope and unconventional antiferromagnetism to change the bits from zeros to ones. By combining 96 of the atoms, the researchers were able to create bytes — spelling out the word THINK. That solved a theoretical problem of how few atoms it could take to store a bit; now comes the engineering challenge: how to make a mass storage device perform the same feat as scanning tunneling microscope."

29 of 135 comments (clear)

  1. 12 atoms? Go smaller! by Xanny · · Score: 4, Funny

    Preface: I'm just a programmer nerd who reads slashdot. I have no idea what I am talking about.

    I wonder if it would be possible to have data storage as an ionization of a solid in the normal operating range of tech (and probably small, like carbon) where ionized atoms represent one bits and non ionized represent zero bits, and you can read atoms in some rigid lattice where the ionized ones represent ones and the neutral atoms are zeroes. Yea, there are huge problems, like preventing electron shell state dropping and keeping the electrons off the negatively charged carbon, but it seems like it would be a great objective considering the smaller data storage type after atom ionization will be measuring quark states to represent multi valued data.

    1. Re:12 atoms? Go smaller! by alphatel · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's so 2011. You need a neutrino computer.

      --
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    2. Re:12 atoms? Go smaller! by griffjon · · Score: 4, Funny

      Only if you care about data integrity...

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      Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
    3. Re:12 atoms? Go smaller! by tocsy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm a materials science graduate student, and my research is on semiconductors. While I don't work with materials for data storage, I have a pretty good background in electronic properties of materials so maybe I can shed some light on the situation.

      Basically, I suppose this would be hypothetically possible but the problems you'd face would be very, very difficult to solve. The big problem here is that in order to keep something ionized, you would have to completely isolate it from any other atoms that might donate/steal an electron. Again it's hypothetically possible, but impractical considering most of those are noble gasses. Not to mention, storing data as ionized/unionized atoms is fundamentally different from the way we store data now (magnetic domains). I think the more reasonable idea would be to shrink magnetic domains, as well as the number of magnetic domains required to form a bit. If I remember correctly, currently each magnetic domain consists of several hundred atoms and each bit consists of around 100 magnetic domains. As the article states, the best we could get is one atom representing one bit, and the probability of using magnetism over changing to ionization as the mechanism for differentiation between ones and zeroes is very high.

    4. Re:12 atoms? Go smaller! by Amouth · · Score: 3, Funny

      so this will work great for WMRN memory - just where you want to keep your secrets that no one should see..

      --
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    5. Re:12 atoms? Go smaller! by dissy · · Score: 4, Informative

      There was a wonderful paper in Nature titled "The Ultimate physical limits to computation" by Seth Seth Lloyd (Yes the guy with the funny laugh), which discussed exactly how small computation and processing can ever get (Short of discovering new physics of course)

      Entry page: http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/9908043
      Direct PDF Link: http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/quant-ph/pdf/9908/9908043v3.pdf

      It's a fascinating read, which I highly recommend. I believe it will answer your questions as well.

      The summary of the paper:

      Computers are physical systems: what they can and cannot do is dictated by the laws of physics. In particular, the speed with which a physical device can process information is limited by its energy and the amount of information that it can process is limited by the number of degrees of freedom it possesses. This paper explores the physical limits of computation as determined by the speed of light $c$, the quantum scale $\hbar$ and the gravitational constant $G$. As an example, quantitative bounds are put to the computational power of an `ultimate laptop' with a mass of one kilogram confined to a volume of one liter.

  2. The REAL question is... by Prime+Mover · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...once they have these new mass-storage devices, how can I turn it into a homebrew tunnel scanning microscope?

    1. Re:The REAL question is... by tragedy · · Score: 3, Informative

      You can make one now if you like. There's an article here about someone working on an open source kit, but it also mentions other places that will sell you a kit to build your own.

  3. awesome by demonbug · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now they just have to work on that random access time of 300000 milliseconds.

    Should be easy, right?

  4. I think 12 atoms should be enough for everyone ... by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 3, Informative

    . . . now as to shrinking that scanning tunneling microscope . . . that might take a while . . .

    Is anyone aware of how "big" they are . . . I'm not thinking that the word "small" is appropriate . . .

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  5. Re:I think 12 atoms should be enough for everyone by neokushan · · Score: 3, Informative

    To be fair, have you seen how big the first Magnetic HDD's were? Granted, different technology and they still stored a hell of a lot more than 5 bytes, but miniaturisation is only a matter of time.

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  6. Re:IBM's new vision by paleo2002 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Next thing you know, everyone will have to buy appliances with electron guns, magnetrons, lasers and other outlandish sci-fi devices built into them. They'll probably take up entire rooms and cost hundreds of thousands of dollars!

  7. Re:And... by DriedClexler · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are theoretical limits to how much information can be stored in a molecule -- this given by the molar entropy, typically expressed in J/(K*mol). But it can also be expressed, more intuitively, as bits per molecule.

    (Yes, you can convert between J/K and bits -- they measure the same thing, degrees of freedom.)

    Per this table, iron has a molar entropy of 27.3 J/K*mol, or 4.73 bits/molecule.

    IBM is claiming an information density of (1/12) bits/molecule, which is reasonable -- the thermodynamic limit is ~57x greater.

    --
    Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
  8. Density isn't always the problem by dzr0001 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Increasing disk density only solves a handful of problems. Unfortunately it can create more problems as well. As disk size increases, more and more applications will become io bound due to contending for the same piece of metal. For many, if not most, organizations that need large amounts of data, increasing per disk density is pointless unless new technology can be introduced to retrieve it at an exponentially faster rate.

  9. Bad article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a better article here which includes some more information on the experiment. In particular the temperature was 0.5K.

    Also the computerworld article claims that using an antiferromagnetic arrangement of atoms is an advantage because it pulls the atoms more tightly together. I'm not convinced that this is true but even if it is the effect would be completely negligible. The interesting aspect of this arrangement is that each atom cancels out the magnetic field of the atoms either side of it which should help with data stability (a similar effect is seen in perpendicular recording today).

    Unrelatedly: have they/will they publish a paper on this? I can't find anything mentioning a paper in the press releases.

    1. Re:Bad article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, but the paper is tiny and can only be read at low temperatures.

    2. Re:Bad article by JustinOpinion · · Score: 4, Informative

      Unrelatedly: have they/will they publish a paper on this? I can't find anything mentioning a paper in the press releases.

      The actual paper was published today in Science:
      Sebastian Loth[1,2], Susanne Baumann[1,3], Christopher P. Lutz[1], D. M. Eigler[1], Andreas J. Heinrich[1] (Affiliations: [1] IBM Almaden Research Division, [2] Max Planck Institute, [3] University of Basel) Bistability in Atomic-Scale Antiferromagnets Science 13 January 2012: Vol. 335 no. 6065 pp. 196-199 DOI: 10.1126/science.1214131.

      The abstract is:

      Control of magnetism on the atomic scale is becoming essential as data storage devices are miniaturized. We show that antiferromagnetic nanostructures, composed of just a few Fe atoms on a surface, exhibit two magnetic states, the Néel states, that are stable for hours at low temperature. For the smallest structures, we observed transitions between Néel states due to quantum tunneling of magnetization. We sensed the magnetic states of the designed structures using spin-polarized tunneling and switched between them electrically with nanosecond speed. Tailoring the properties of neighboring antiferromagnetic nanostructures enables a low-temperature demonstration of dense nonvolatile storage of information.

      Some big names are on this paper (Don Eigler is a pioneer of STM; responsible for the famous "IBM written with xenon atoms" proof-of-concept, and along with Lutz worked on the also-famous "quantum corrals").

  10. PDP Anyone? by walkerp1 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Had they used the clearly superior RAD-50 encoding, they could have stored THINK with a mere 384 atoms as opposed to 480.

    1. Re:PDP Anyone? by Applekid · · Score: 3, Funny

      Had they used the clearly superior RAD-50 encoding, they could have stored THINK with a mere 384 atoms as opposed to 480.

      I'm just glad they didn't use EBCDIC.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    2. Re:PDP Anyone? by walkerp1 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Had they used the clearly superior RAD-50 encoding, they could have stored THINK with a mere 384 atoms as opposed to 480.

      I'm just glad they didn't use EBCDIC.

      They tried, but the inherent chaos very nearly brought on the heat death of the universe.

  11. Vibration will be the biggest challenge by claytongulick · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From what I understand the most severe engineering challenge with designing a portable STM will be overcoming the vibration issues. Current "home brew" STMs are built in a sandbox for this reason, afaik.

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    1. Re:Vibration will be the biggest challenge by JustinOpinion · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're right that for STMs and AFMs instruments, vibration is a huge issue. But when using those instruments, you're trying to image nano-sized objects, or even individual atoms. So of course vibrations bigger than an atom's width will ruin your image. You can compensate for this (to a point) by making the device more rigid, and also by dampening out environmental noise. But there's a limit to what you can do (e.g. you can't make the cantilever your tip is attached to very stiff, or you would ruin your sensitivity).

      In an atomic magnetic memory, though, you wouldn't really be imaging individual atoms. You'd be scanning the tip back-and-forth and trying to sense (or set) the local magnetic field. Thus you wouldn't need to use a soft cantilever to hold the tip. A very stiff/rigid one would be fine, as long as it is correctly positioned in relation to the encoding atoms (close enough for sensing, etc.). The magnetic response in general will be stronger than the usual imaging modes for STM.

      My point is just that using a STM-like device for storing/retrieving data eliminates many of the design constraints that a full-blown STM needs (because it's trying to do precise topography and density-of-states imaging...). You can play many engineering tricks that they can't afford to do in a real STM.

      Having said that, many challenges would remain. External vibrations could still make the device unstable (or require it to sample for longer periods to average-out signals, thus making data throughput lower). Temperature stability is probably going to be a major concern (thermal expansion will change the nano-sized gap between the tip and bits, which will need to be compensate for; thermal noise could overwhelm the signal entirely; thermal gradients could make alignment of the tips and compensation for temperature drift even harder; etc.).

      Then again, you only have to look at the absurd sophistication of modern HDDs or CPUs to be convinced that we can handle these kinds of challenging engineering problems (if there is enough economic incentive).

    2. Re:Vibration will be the biggest challenge by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's also worth noting that modern hard disks already position the read head staggeringly close to the platter already - on the order of 10nm of clearance or less. And this is in a consumer electronic device.

      Most of the constraints of STM and AFM are related to the fact that they are general purpose, highly accurate devices, intended to study arbitrary samples (and work down to the 0.1 nm type scales while doing it).

  12. Re:And... by timeOday · · Score: 4, Informative
    And the document you cited assumes a temperature of 298.15 K (77F). At room temp, the IBM technique requires about 150 molecules, not 12 (cite):

    "At low temperatures, this number is 12; at room temperature, the number is around 150 - not quite as impressive, but still an order of magnitude better than any existing hard drive or silicon (MRAM) storage solution."

    So there is even more headroom in the thermodynamic limit.

  13. Re:And... by gandhi_2 · · Score: 4, Funny

    You know, when you are storing bits and you are already at 12, where can you go from there? Where?

    No where.

    Ours goes to 11.

    One smaller.

  14. Then we'll need a faster bus by FridayBob · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Imagine having a hard disk with a capacity of 2,000 TB. Using a SATA 3.0 bus with a sustained maximum throughput of 600 MiB/s, it would still take over 37 days to read or write the entire device.

  15. Re:I think 12 atoms should be enough for everyone by pscottdv · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, an STM is typically about the size of a baseball. The vacuum chamber housing it, however...

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  16. Re:I think 12 atoms should be enough for everyone by JustinOpinion · · Score: 5, Informative

    Is anyone aware of how "big" they are

    An actual STM instrument is pretty big. About the size of, say, a mini-fridge. But the majority of that is the computer to drive the system, the readout electronics, and the enclosure (to dampen out vibrations, establish vacuum, etc.). The actual readout tip is pretty small: a nano-sized tip attached to ~100 micron 'diving board' assembly.

    A related problem with STM is that it's a serial process: you have a small tip that you're scanning over a surface. This makes readout slow. However in a separate project, IBM (and others) has been working on how to solve that: the idea is to use a huge array of tips that scan the surface in parallel (IBM calls it millipede memory). This makes access faster since you can basically stripe the data and read/write in parallel, and it makes random seeks faster since you don't have to move the tip array as far to get to the data you want. It increases complexity, of course, but modern nano-lithography is certainly up to the task of creating arrays of hundreds of thousands of micron-sized tips with associated electronics.

    Using tip arrays would make the read/write parts more compact (as compared to having separate parallel STMs, I mean). The enclosure and driving electronics could certainly be miniaturized if there were economic incentive to do so. There's no physical barrier preventing these kinds of machines from being substantially micronized. As others have pointed out, the first magnetic disk read/write systems were rather bulk, and now hard drives can fit in your pocket. It's possible the same thing could happen here. Having said that, current data storage techniques have a huge head-start, so for something like this to catch up to the point where consumers will want to buy it may take some time.

  17. Re:IBM's new vision by DriedClexler · · Score: 3, Funny

    Please. There's a world market for maybe 5 scanning tunneling microscopes.

    --
    Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.