Your use of the word "eigenvalue" seems a little odd. Just so we're on the same page, let me describe what eigenvalues mean in QM.
In classical physics, if you measure some physical quantity such as the momentum or angular momentum of a particle, you can get any real number as the result. In contrast, in quantum mechanics, observable quantities are associated with operators, and every operator has an associated set of eigenvalues. Quantum mechanics assumes that any measurement of an observable quantity can only produce an eigenvalue.
So while classically, a spinning or orbiting object can have absolutely any positive value for its angular momentum, in quantum mechanics, it can only be measured to have a discrete set of possible values: \frac{\hbar}{2}, \hbar, \frac{3 \hbar}{2}, 2 \hbar, ...
That's a rough idea of what "eigenvalue" means in quantum mechanics. So in light of that understanding of eigenvalues, what does it mean to say that memory chips are "made of quantum eigenvalues"?