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Supplementary Material Conducted growth of SrRuO3 nanodot arrays on self-ordered La0.18Sr0.82Al0.59Ta0.41O3(001) surfaces R. Bachelet,a) C. Ocal, L. Garzón, J. Fontcuberta, and F. Sánchezb) Institut de Ciència de Materials de Barcelona (ICMAB-CSIC), Campus de la UAB, 08193 Bellaterra, Spain a) E-mail: [email protected] b) E-mail: [email protected] 1 Supplementary Material When the diffusion length matches the terrace width, AO-BO2 nanostripes are formed at the surfaces of perovskite ABO3(001) single-crystals by surface diffusion with a good lateral ordering directed by the periodic surface steps (Figs. 1c, 2b, 3a, S1). In the explored perovskite La0.18Sr0.82Al0.59Ta0.41O3 (LSAT) single-crystals, lateral sizes of single-terminated terraces range from 400 nm down to 80 nm, corresponding to miscut angles from 0.03º to 0.14º, respectively. The lower-miscut substrates will then need more time at high temperature (or annealing with enhanced temperature) to surface patterns similar to those of higher-miscut substrates. In Figure S2, we show that for a low miscut substrate (0.03º) complete assembly takes more time than 2h. The surface of Figure S2a has not suffered enough annealing for a well-defined assembly completion. After 12h, chemical terminations are assembled (quite clear phase image) but there are still some (vacancy) islands and numerous kinks at edges in the minority phase (Fig. S2b), that means that the surface can reach an even more favorable morphological state. After longer treatment we expect that stripes straighten along the steps as it has been observed previously, and after much longer treatment (Fig. S2c), stripes tend to minimize costly step-edges and then minority-phase areas organize from stripes to closed rounded areas as it can be observed in Fig. S2c. We measured the AO/BO2 termination ratio on the atomic force microscopy (AFM) phase-lag images of Fig. S2b and Fig. S2c by using the flooding tool of the WSxM software [a]. On both images the termination ratio is roughly the same (30%) evidencing that the surface is not degraded during annealing and that the diffusion occurs mainly at the surface and not in volume avoiding enrichment of the surface by bulk elements (see extreme right panels of Fig. S2b and Fig. S2c, where red pixels represent 30% of the total area). [a] The WSxM free software can be found at http://www.nanotec.es/; I. Horcas, R. Fernández, J. M. Gómez-Rodriguez, J. Colchero, J. Gómez-Herrero, and A. M. Baro, Rev. Sci. Instr. 78, 013705 (2007) 2 Supplementary Material Figure S1 (a) (b) Z (Å) 4 2 0 0 (c) 50 100 150 X (nm) (d) Figure S1. Friction force microscopy (FFM) images of a LSAT(001) (0.1º-miscut) single-crystal after thermal treatment at 1300ºC for 6h. (a) topography, (b) corresponding height profile, (c) friction forward and (d) friction backward. The ½ uc steps separating the alternated AO and BO2 terraces of LSAT, imaged here by a friction contrast, attests of the ordered separation at the nanoscale of the chemical terminations, with correct topography, as measured in dynamic mode AFM in figure 1. 3 Supplementary Material Figure S2 (a) (b) (c) Figure S2. (5×5 μm2) AFM topographic images (left panel) along with the corresponding phase-shift images (central panel) after treatment in air of a LSAT(001) (0.03º-miscut) single-crystal at 1300ºC for (a) 2h, (b) 12h, and (c) 72h. The same wafer was cut in three pieces and each piece suffered one of the single-treatments. Even at these annealing conditions, neither degradation of the atomically-flat surface, nor apparent change in the (AO/BO2) chemical-termination ratio occurs. The right images in (b,c) represent the corresponding phase images after flooding analysis using the WSxM software [a] giving a termination ratio of 30% for both. 4 Supplementary Material