International audienceEpitaxial growth on a surface vicinal to a high-symmetry crystallographic plane occurs through the propagation of atomic steps, a process called step-flow growth. In some instances, the steps tend to form close groups (or bunches), a phenomenon termed step bunching, which corresponds to an instability of the equal-spacing step propagation. Over the last fifty years, various mechanisms have been proposed to explain step bunching, the most prominent of which are the inverse Ehrlich-Schwoebel effect (i.e., the asymmetry which favors the attachment of adatoms from the upper terrace), elastically mediated interactions between steps (in heteroepitaxy), step permeability (in electromigration-controlled growth), and the chemic...