The State Key Laboratory of Spintronics is dedicated to serving major national plans and regional economic development, cultivating urgently needed talent in integrated circuits and related fields, breaking through key technologies of post-Moore era integrated circuits, and striving to build a domestic full-process 8-inch micro-nano fabrication and analysis testing public platform characterized by spin chips. The laboratory mainly conducts research in the areas of post-Moore era integrated circuit materials and physics, memory and computing-storage devices, chip integration processes and design, characterization and equipment for specialized chips, as well as micro-nano science and analysis testing. After more than a decade of effort, the laboratory team has achieved multiple original results in the technology of post-Moore era integrated circuits, publishing 19 papers in the Nature and Science series over the past five years, and receiving awards such as the First Prize of Natural Science of Beijing, the First Prize of Natural Science of the Chinese Institute of Electronics, and the First Prize of Technological Invention of the Chinese Society for Instrumentation. The laboratory has built a research team with international characteristics, with more than 80% of its members having studied abroad. The laboratory emphasizes cultivating students' global competence and the international influence of the discipline, and has signed dual-PhD agreements with universities including Université Paris-Saclay and Université de Lorraine in France, Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology in Russia, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland, and KU Leuven in Belgium. In recent years, dozens of students have participated in dual-degree and joint programs at the above universities as well as internationally top-ranked institutions such as the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the University of Tokyo.