This article highlights NIST’s newly operational Atomic Scale Characterization and Manipulation Laboratory, which focuses on foundational measurement techniques rather than a formalized quantum standard or protocol. The facility is already implementing advanced methods to measure and arrange materials at the single-atom level, serving as an active testing ground for future nanotechnology benchmarks.
Using a highly sensitive microscope that operates near absolute zero inside a strong magnetic field, researchers can now see and move individual atoms with extreme precision. A computer-controlled system automatically builds and tests these tiny structures, creating reliable ways to track how single atoms behave. This capability is expected to accelerate the creation of next-generation electronics, data storage, and information processing systems that rely on atomic-scale quantum properties, though specific commercial rollout timelines have not yet been announced.
Keywords: scanning tunneling microscope, atomic precision, atom manipulation