During the fellowship, the project achieved major progress in experimental capability building and in alternative low-symmetry materials, while facing significant fabrication bottlenecks for the originally planned Te-based device platforms. Extensive fabrication campaigns on Te/YIG and Te-based heterostructures identified critical adhesion and yield limitations. In response, the work plan was adapted through scientifically justified pivots: (i) successful MOKE measurements during secondment at ETH Zurich on conductive low-symmetry vdW materials, where an unconventional current-induced spin accumulation was detected; (ii) implementation of a PPMS-compatible RF/FMR measurement platform (2 K, 9 T) at the host institution, including iterative probe development with collaborators; (iii) productive exploitation of layered magnetic and telluride systems beyond the original Te/CGT route, including published results on ferromagnetism above 200 K in intercalated CrSBr and follow-up FMR dynamics measurements, and non-reciprocal transport in low symmetry Te-based vdW conductors (manuscript in preparation).