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Funded Projects › FP7

InSpin · Insulator Spintronics

FP7Status: CLOSED1 March 201428 February 2017EU funding €2,009,301

InSpin will develop revolutionary nano-scale insulator spintronics that can replace or be integrated with conventional electronics and function at ambient temperatures. The innovation lies in the use of spin currents that in magnetic insulators are decoupled from charge currents and propagate with extremely low power dissipation. InSpin's objectives are to provide a disruptive technology that is spin-based, low-power and ultra-low-noise, leading to superior oscillators, logics, and random access memory compared to those based on charge-based electronics. Ultimately, electrical current-driven magnon Bose-Einstein condensation and the associated super spin-currents enable dissipationless spintronics at room temperature. The strong reduction or even the complete absence of power dissipation in (super) insulator spintronics implies loss-less transfer of spin signals that circumvents the energy dissipation problem, which threatens to end Moore's Law in information and communication technology. InSpin's final deliverable is to fabricate the first functional spin wave bus with signal input and detection and to use this bus to realize a logic majority gate as the key component for future insulator spintronics.

Consortium · 5 organisations

coordinator

NORGES TEKNISK-NATURVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET NTNU

NO · €551,015

participant

JOHANNES GUTENBERG-UNIVERSITAT MAINZ

DE · €371,127

participant

RHEINLAND-PFALZISCHE TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITAT

DE · €373,350

participant

RIJKSUNIVERSITEIT GRONINGEN

NL · €398,090

participant

TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITEIT DELFT

NL · €315,719

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.