Multiple nodal superconducting phases and order-parameter evolution in pressurized UTe2
Abstract
Spin-triplet superconductivity (SC) offers a unique avenue for realizing non-Abelian Majorana zero modes and thus the fault-tolerant topological quantum computation, and has attracted a broad audience for both fundamental research and potential applications. The recently discovered heavy-fermion spin-triplet superconductor candidate UTe2 has sparked great interest for its ultrahigh upper critical field and reentrant SC phases in the proximity to a field-polarized magnetic state. Despite extensive studies on the phase diagrams and competing orders induced by pressure and magnetic field, limited has been known about its SC order parameters and their evolution with these control parameters, largely due to the lack of appropriate symmetry-sensitive detections. Here, we report comprehensive point-contact spectroscopy measurements of pressurized UTe2 on the (0~0~1) surface. The observation of Andreev bound state strongly suggests the presence of a pz component in the SC order parameters. Quantitative analysis based on an extended Blonder-Tinkham-Klapwijk model unveils B2u or B3u as the most likely representation for both ambient and pressurized UTe2, and remarkably, the multiple SC phases can be distinguished by a single parameter z/x(y), the relative weight between the pz-wave and px(y)-wave pairings. These findings not only impose stringent constraints on the superconducting order parameter in UTe2, but also provide key spectroscopic evidence for the existence of multiple SC phases tuned through pressure.
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