A discovery of gravitational waves from binary black holes raises a possibility that measurements of them can provide strict tests of CPT invariance in gravitational waves. When CPT violation exists, if any, gravitational waves with different circular polarizations could gain a slight difference in propagating speeds. Hence, the birefringence of gravitational waves is induced and there should be a rotation of plus and cross modes. For CPT-violating dispersion relation ${\omega^{2}=k^{2}}$ ${\pm 2\zeta k^{3}}$, where a sign ${\pm}$ denotes different circular polarizations, we find no substantial deviations from CPT invariance in gravitational waves by analyzing a compilation of ten signals of binary black holes in the LIGO-Virgo catalog GWTC-1. We obtain a strict constraint on the CPT-violating parameter, i.e., $\zeta=0.14^{+0.22}_{-0.31}\times10^{-15}\text{m}$, which is around two orders of magnitude better than the existing one. Therefore, this study stands for the up-to-date strictest tests of CPT invariance in gravitational waves.
Comment: 6 pages, 2 columns, 2 figures, 1 table. Moderate revision. To appear in EPJC