Microscopic QR Code: Guinness World Record for Tiny, Durable Data Storage on Ceramic

March 29, 2026
Microscopic QR Code: Guinness World Record for Tiny, Durable Data Storage on Ceramic
  • The project emphasizes durability and independence from power, drawing inspiration from enduring ancient inscriptions.

  • The team’s achievement has been officially recognized by Guinness World Records for the tiny size and durability of the data storage method.

  • Long-term data preservation is envisioned, with the method potentially lasting hundreds to thousands of years without energy input to maintain data.

  • The approach promises extremely high data density, with more than 2 terabytes potentially stored in the area of a single A4 sheet, aiming for durability under extreme conditions.

  • A microscopic QR code, measuring 1.98 square micrometers with each pixel at 49 nanometers, is far smaller than most bacteria and invisible under visible light, though readable with electron microscopy.

  • TU Wien researchers and Cerabyte engraved the QR code into ultra-stable ceramic materials, making it visible only under an electron microscope.

  • Ceramic data storage is pitched as a sustainable, long-lasting solution requiring minimal energy and maintenance, potentially enduring centuries or millennia.

  • The ceramic medium is presented as a durable alternative to magnetic and electronic media, reducing energy use and cooling needs for long-term archiving.

  • The achievement has earned official global recognition as a Guinness World Records entry, highlighting both the small scale and durability of the storage method.

  • Future work includes testing other materials, increasing writing speeds, and developing scalable manufacturing processes to move beyond laboratory settings.

  • Plans also cover expanding beyond QR codes to more complex data structures in ceramic thin films and broader industrial applications.

  • A core challenge addressed is data stability at the nanoscale, where atomic movement can erase information; the ceramic method yields a stable, repeatedly readable code.

Summary based on 2 sources


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