A single magnetic atom on a surface epitomizes the scaling limit for magnetic
information storage. Indeed, recent work has shown that individual atomic spins
can exhibit magnetic remanence and be read out with spin-based methods,
demonstrating the fundamental requirements for magnetic memory. However, atomic
spin memory has been only realized on thin insulating surfaces to date,
removing potential tunability via electronic gating or distance-dependent
exchange-driven magnetic coupling. Here, we show a novel mechanism for
single-atom magnetic information storage based on bistability in the orbital
population, or so-called valency, of an individual Co atom on semiconducting
black phosphorus (BP). Distance-dependent screening from the BP surface
stabilizes the two distinct valencies and enables us to electronically
manipulate the relative orbital population, total magnetic moment and spatial
charge density of an individual magnetic atom without a spin-dependent readout
mechanism. Furthermore, we show that the strongly anisotropic wavefunction can
be used to locally tailor the switching dynamics between the two valencies.
This orbital memory derives stability from the energetic barrier to atomic
relaxation and demonstrates the potential for high-temperature single-atom
information storage