Inhomogeneous high temperature melting and decoupling of charge density waves in spin-triplet superconductor UTe2

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Abstract

Charge, spin and Cooper-pair density waves have now been widely detected in exotic superconductors. Understanding how these density waves emerge — and become suppressed by external parameters — is a key research direction in condensed matter physics. Here we study the temperature and magnetic-field evolution of charge density waves in the rare spin-triplet superconductor candidate UTe2 using scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy. We reveal that charge modulations composed of three different wave vectors gradually weaken in a spatially inhomogeneous manner, while persisting to surprisingly high temperatures of 10–12 K. We also reveal an unexpected decoupling of the three-component charge density wave state. Our observations match closely to the temperature scale potentially related to short-range magnetic correlations, providing a possible connection between density waves observed by surface probes and intrinsic bulk features. Importantly, charge density wave modulations become suppressed with magnetic field both below and above superconducting Tc in a comparable manner. Our work points towards an intimate connection between hidden magnetic correlations and the origin of the unusual charge density waves in UTe2.

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LaFleur, A., Li, H., Frank, C. E., Xu, M., Cheng, S., Wang, Z., … Zeljkovic, I. (2024). Inhomogeneous high temperature melting and decoupling of charge density waves in spin-triplet superconductor UTe2. Nature Communications , 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48844-7

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