Abstract

In tunneling spectroscopy of superconductors the density of states close to the surface or the interface to an insulating tunneling barrier is probed. For d-wave superconductors the particle–hole coherence results in interesting new phenomena at surfaces such as the formation of bound surface states at the Fermi level by Andreev reflection due to a sign change of the order parameter field in different k -directions. The probing of these states represents a phase-sensitive experiment allowing the determination of the order parameter symmetry in superconductors. We summarize the present experimental status with respect to the study of high-temperature superconductors (HTS). We discuss theoretically predicted consequences of a dominating d-wave order parameter in the hole-doped HTS on their tunneling spectra as well as on the physics of high-temperature superconductor Josephson junctions. A comparison of the tunneling spectra obtained for hole- and electron-doped HTS leads to the conclusion that the former have a d-wave, whereas the latter most likely have an anisotropic s-wave order parameter. We also address some unsettled questions related to the presence of a state with broken time-reversal symmetry at surfaces and interfaces of d-wave HTS and discuss specific features of d-wave tunnel junctions that have been predicted theoretically but still not been confirmed in experiments.

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