# Detecting and Directing Single Molecule Binding Events on H-Si(100) with   Application to Ultra-dense Data Storage

**Authors:** Roshan Achal, Mohammad Rashidi, Jeremiah Croshaw, Taleana Huff, Robert, A. Wolkow

arXiv: 1907.03218 · 2020-02-11

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a novel STM-based charge detection method to observe single molecule binding on silicon surfaces, enabling precise atomic-scale surface modification and a new ultra-dense data storage approach with 0.88 petabits per inch squared capacity.

## Contribution

It presents a new charge detection technique for atomic-scale observation and a molecular repassivation method for ultra-dense data storage applications.

## Key findings

- Successful detection of single molecule binding events
- Development of an error correction tool for hydrogen lithography
- Implementation of a 0.88 petabit per inch squared data storage system

## Abstract

Many new material systems are being explored to enable smaller, more capable and energy efficient devices. These bottom up approaches for atomic and molecular electronics, quantum computation, and data storage all rely on a well-developed understanding of materials at the atomic scale. Here, we report a versatile scanning tunneling microscope (STM) charge characterization technique, which reduces the influence of the typically perturbative STM tip field, to develop this understanding even further. Using this technique, we can now observe single molecule binding events to atomically defined reactive sites (fabricated on a hydrogen-terminated silicon surface) through electronic detection. We then developed a new error correction tool for automated hydrogen lithography, directing molecular hydrogen binding events using these sites to precisely repassivate surface dangling bonds (without the use of a scanned probe). We additionally incorporated this molecular repassivation technique as the primary rewriting mechanism in new ultra-dense atomic data storage designs (0.88 petabits per in$^{2}$).

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.03218