ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Experimental and computational studies on the surface reaction of carbonyl sulfide with hydrogen atoms on compact amorphous solid water

93   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Yasuhiro Oba
 تاريخ النشر 2021
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Carbonyl sulfide (OCS) is an abundant sulfur (S)-bearing species in the interstellar medium. It is present not only in the gas phase, but also on interstellar grains as as solid; therefore, OCS very likely undergoes physico-chemical processes on icy surfaces at very low temperatures. The present study experimentally and computationally investigates the reaction of solid OCS with hydrogen (H) atoms on amorphous solid water at low temperatures. The results show that H addition to OCS proceeds via quantum tunneling, and further H addition leads to the formation of carbon monoxide (CO), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), formaldehyde (H2CO), methanol (CH3OH) and thioformic acid (HC(O)SH). These experimental results are explained by our quantum chemical calculations, which demonstrate that the initial H addition to the S atom of OCS is the most predominant, leading to the formation of OCS-H radicals. Once the formed OCS-H radical is stabilized on ices, further H addtion to the S atom yields CO and H2S, while that to the C atom yields HC(O)SH. We have also confirmed, in a separate experiment, the HCOSH formation by the HCO reactions with the SH radicals. The present results would have an important implication for the recent detection of HC(O)SH toward H+0.693-0.027.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Dynamics of adsorption and desorption of (4S)-N on amorphous solid water are analyzed using molecular dynamics simulations. The underlying potential energy surface was provided by machine-learned interatomic potentials. Binding energies confirm the l atest available theoretical and experimental results. The nitrogen sticking coefficient is close to unity at dust temperatures of 10 K but decreases at higher temperatures. We estimate a desorption time scale of 1 {mu}s at 28 K. The estimated time scale allows chemical processes mediated by diffusion to happen before desorption, even at higher temperatures. We found that the energy dissipation process after a sticking event happens on the picosecond timescale at dust temperatures of 10 K, even for high energies of the incoming adsorbate. Our approach allows the simulation of large systems for reasonable time scales at an affordable computational cost and ab-initio accuracy. Moreover, it is generally applicable for the study of adsorption dynamics of interstellar radicals on dust surfaces.
We investigated the behavior of H$_2$, main constituent of the gas phase in dense clouds, after collision with amorphous solid water (ASW) surfaces, one of the most abundant chemical species of interstellar ices. We developed a general framework to s tudy the adsorption dynamics of light species on interstellar ices. We provide binding energies and their distribution, sticking probabilities for incident energies between 1 meV and 60 meV, and thermal sticking coefficients between 10 and 300 K for surface temperatures from 10 to 110 K. We found that the sticking probability depends strongly on the adsorbate kinetic energy and the surface temperature, but hardly on the angle of incidence. We observed finite sticking probabilities above the thermal desorption temperature. Adsorption and thermal desorption should be considered as separate events with separate time scales. Laboratory results for these species have shown a gap in the trends attributed to the differently employed experimental techniques. Our results complement observations and extend them, increasing the range of gas temperatures under consideration. We plan to employ our method to study a variety of adsorbates, including radical and charged species.
224 - A. Simpson , A. Ludu , H. J. Cho 2014
In this study we describe lab experiments on determining the above water reflectance Rrs coefficient, and the water attenuation coefficient Kd for fresh water. Different types of screens (totally absorbent, gray, etc.) were submerged in water (0-0.6 m) and illuminated from outside. The spectral density of the water leaving radiance was measured for different depths. The results were ran by a code which took into account the geometry of the incident irradiation, the geometry of the screen under water, and boundary conditions at the water surface provided by the radiation transfer theory. From the experimental data and our model we obtain the spectral distribution of the attenuation coefficient for fresh water and compared it with other data in literature. These experiments, performed in the Nonlinear Wave Lab at ERAU# represent just a preliminary calibration of the experimental protocol. More tests with water of different degrees of turbidity, and possibly wave filed at the water surface are in progress and will be presented in a forthcoming paper.
Vacuum-UV (VUV) photodesorption from water-rich ice mantles coating interstellar grains is known to play an important role in the gas-to-ice ratio in star- and planet-forming regions. Quantitative photodesorption yields from water ice are crucial for astrochemical models. We aim to provide the first quantitative photon-energy dependent photodesorption yields from water ice in the VUV. This information is important to understand the photodesorption mechanisms and to account for the variation of the yields under interstellar irradiation conditions. Experiments have been performed on the DESIRS beamline at the SOLEIL synchrotron, delivering tunable VUV light, using the SPICES (Surface Processes and ICES) set-up. Compact amorphous solid water ice (H$_2$O and D$_2$O) has been irradiated from 7 to 13.5 eV. Quantitative yields have been obtained by detection in the gas phase with mass-spectrometry for sample temperatures ranging from 15 K to 100 K. Photodesorption spectra of H$_2$O (D$_2$O), OH (OD), H$_2$ (D$_2$) and O$_2$ peak around 9-10 eV and decrease at higher energies. Average photodesorption yields of intact water at 15 K are 5 $times$ 10$^{-4}$ molecule/photon for H$_2$O and 5 $times$ 10$^{-5}$ molecule/photon for D$_2$O over the 7-13.5 eV range. The strong isotopic effect can be explained by a differential chemical recombination between OH (OD) and H (D) photofragments originating from lower kinetic energy available for the OH photofragments upon direct water photodissociation and/or possibly by an electronic relaxation process. It is expected to contribute to water fractionation during the building-up of the ice grain mantles in molecular clouds and to favor OH-poor chemical environment in comet-formation regions of protoplanetary disks. The yields of all the detected species except OH (OD) are enhanced above (70 $pm$10) K, suggesting an ice restructuration at this temperature.
In the quest to understand the formation of the building blocks of life, amorphous solid water (ASW) is one of the most widely studied molecular systems. Indeed, ASW is ubiquitous in the cold interstellar medium (ISM), where ASW-coated dust grains pr ovide a catalytic surface for solid phase chemistry, and is believed to be present in the Earths atmosphere at high altitudes. It has been shown that the ice surface adsorbs small molecules such as CO, N$_2$, or CH$_4$, most likely at OH groups dangling from the surface. Our study presents completely new insights concerning the behaviour of ASW upon selective infrared (IR) irradiation of its dangling modes. When irradiated, these surface H$_2$O molecules reorganise, predominantly forming a stabilised monomer-like water mode on the ice surface. We show that we systematically provoke hole-burning effects (or net loss of oscillators) at the wavelength of irradiation and reproduce the same absorbed water monomer on the ASW surface. Our study suggests that all dangling modes share one common channel of vibrational relaxation; the ice remains amorphous but with a reduced range of binding sites, and thus an altered catalytic capacity.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا