The universality of self-organisation: a path to an atom printer?
Serim Ilday, F. Oemer Ilday

TL;DR
This paper explores the possibility of creating a 3D atom printer by leveraging self-organisation to overcome current technological challenges in atomic-scale fabrication.
Contribution
It identifies fundamental challenges in atomic-scale 3D printing and proposes self-organisation as a promising complementary approach to direct laser writing.
Findings
Current laser-based methods cannot reach atomic resolution due to fundamental issues.
Self-organisation offers a potential pathway to overcome these limitations.
The paper suggests a hybrid approach combining direct writing and self-organisation.
Abstract
In 1989, Eigler and Schweizer spelt the letters IBM by positioning 35 individual Xenon atoms at 4 Kelvin temperature. The arrangement took approximately 22 hours. This was an outstanding demonstration of control over individual atoms. Since then, 3D printers developed into a near-ubiquitous technology. Nevertheless, with typical resolutions in the micrometres, they are far from the atomic scale of control that the IBM demonstration seemed to herald. Even the highest resolution achieved with ultrafast lasers driving two-photon polymerization barely reaches 100 nm, three orders of magnitude distant from the atomic scale. Here, we adopt a long-term view when we ask about the possibility of a 3D atom printer, which can build an arbitrarily shaped object of macroscopic dimensions with control over its atomic structure at room temperature. After discussing the state-of-the-art technology…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser Material Processing Techniques · Laser-induced spectroscopy and plasma
