The TOPSPIN project has achieved its goals and delivered major advances in nanomagnetism, spintronics, and unconventional computing. Over its full duration, the project produced 39 peer-reviewed publications and an additional preprint under review, with many results appearing in leading scientific journals. All three work packages progressed strongly and led to several breakthroughs in device fabrication, oscillator physics, computing concepts, and ultrafast characterization.
A central achievement was the creation of large, coherent networks of spin Hall nano-oscillators (SHNOs). TOPSPIN demonstrated two-dimensional arrays containing more than 100,000 mutually synchronized oscillators—an improvement of five orders of magnitude compared with the state of the art before the project began. These results establish SHNOs as a powerful platform for studying collective dynamics and for building next-generation computing hardware based on coupled oscillators.
The project also showed how SHNO technology can be combined with memristive elements to create reconfigurable oscillator networks. By integrating non-volatile gates directly on top of SHNOs, we demonstrated selective programming and long-term storage of their oscillation properties, enabling ultrafast pattern-recognition tasks in one-dimensional chains. In parallel, we established two-dimensional SHNO arrays as viable oscillator-based Ising Machines, capable of representing and solving optimization problems in a hardware-native manner.
Another major outcome of TOPSPIN is the development of two advanced microscopy techniques that provide new capabilities for visualizing spin waves, phonons, and oscillator states. The first combines femtosecond laser–comb excitation with Brillouin light scattering microscopy, enabling studies of ultrafast magnetization and phonon dynamics with simultaneously high temporal, spectral, and spatial resolution. The second is a phase-sensitive optical microscope for observing injection-locked and phase-binarized SHNOs, allowing the mapping of their phase states with sub-diffraction-limited precision.
Together, these scientific and technological achievements greatly expand what is experimentally possible in nanoscale magnetism and oscillator-based computing. The results of TOPSPIN establish a strong foundation for future research on coherent nanomagnetic networks, beyond-CMOS hardware, and ultrafast magnetization dynamics.