Abstract. Laboratory experiments involving vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) irradiation of solid isocyanic acid (HNCO) at 10 K, followed by infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), are used to interpret the complex spectra associated with Interstellar Medium (ISM) dust grains, particularly the spectra associated with the icy phase observed toward dense molecular clouds. The comparison of the infrared spectra of the photolysis products with spectra recorded from the protostellar source NGC 7538 IRS9 shows that the "unexplained" 1700 cm −1 feature can be attributed to the contribution of several species H 2 CO (formaldehyde), HCONH 2 (formamide) and H 2 NCONH 2 (urea) mixed with H 2 O as the main contributor. Urea, formaldehyde and NH− (ammonium cyanate) may also contribute to a band at 1470 cm −1 , widely observed in many protostellar infrared sources and which remains up to now poorly explained in numerous ISO-SWS spectra. Isocyanic acid could be a precursor of formamide and urea in interstellar ices.
Context. Water is the major component of the interstellar ice mantle. In interstellar ice, chemical reactivity is limited by the diffusion of the reacting molecules, which are usually present at abundances of a few percent with respect to water. Aims. We want to study the thermal diffusion of H 2 CO, NH 3 , HNCO, and CO in amorphous water ice experimentally to account for the mobility of these molecules in the interstellar grain ice mantle. Methods. In laboratory experiments performed at fixed temperatures, the diffusion of molecules in ice analogues was monitored by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Diffusion coefficients were extracted from isothermal experiments using Fick's second law of diffusion. Results. We measured the surface diffusion coefficients and their dependence with the temperature in porous amorphous ice for HNCO, H 2 CO, NH 3 , and CO. They range from 10 −15 to 10 −11 cm 2 s −1 for HNCO, H 2 CO, and NH 3 between 110 K and 140 K, and between 5-8 × 10 −13 cm 2 s −1 for CO between 35 K and 40 K. The bulk diffusion coefficients in compact amorphous ice are too low to be measured by our technique and a 10 −15 cm 2 s −1 upper limit can be estimated. The amorphous ice framework reorganization at low temperature is also put in evidence. Conclusions. Surface diffusion of molecular species in amorphous ice can be experimentally measured, while their bulk diffusion may be slower than the ice mantle desorption kinetics.
ContextMethods. Infrared and mass spectroscopy are used to monitor NH 3 :CO 2 ice mixture evolution during both warming and VUV photon irradiation.Results. Carbamic acid and ammonium carbamate can be produced thermally in a 1:1 ratio from NH 3 and CO 2 above 80 K. They can be also formed in a 28:1 ratio by less efficient processes such as energetic photons. Our study and its results provide fresh insight into carbamic acid formation in interstellar ices. Conclusions. We demonstrate that care is required to separate irradiation-induced reactivity from purely thermal reactivity in ices in which ammonia and carbon dioxide are both present. From an interstellar chemistry point of view, carbamic acid and ammonium carbamate are readily produced from the ice mantle of a typical interstellar grain and should therefore be a detectable species in molecular clouds.
Context. Hydrogenation reactions dominate grain surface chemistry in dense molecular clouds and lead to the formation of complex saturated molecules in the interstellar medium. Aims. We investigate in the laboratory the hydrogenation reaction network of hydrogen cyanide HCN. Methods. Pure hydrogen cyanide HCN and methanimine CH 2 NH ices are bombarded at room temperature by H-atoms in an ultra-high vacuum experiment. Warm H-atoms are generated in an H 2 plasma source. The ices are monitored with Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy in reflection absorption mode. The hydrogenation products are detected in the gas phase by mass spectroscopy during temperature-programmed desorption experiments. Results. HCN hydrogenation leads to the formation of methylamine CH 3 NH 2 , and CH 2 NH hydrogenation leads to the formation of methylamine CH 3 NH 2 , suggesting that CH 2 NH can be a hydrogenation-intermediate species between HCN and CH 3 NH 2 . Conclusions. In cold environments the HCN hydrogenation reaction can produce CH 3 NH 2 , which is known to be a glycine precursor, and to destroy solid-state HCN, preventing its observation in molecular clouds ices.
Among all existing complex organic molecules, glycolaldehyde HOCH 2 CHO and ethylene glycol HOCH 2 CH 2 OH are two of the largest detected molecules in the interstellar medium. We investigate both experimentally and theoretically the low-temperature reaction pathways leading to glycolaldehyde and ethylene glycol in interstellar grains. Using infrared spectroscopy, mass spectroscopy and quantum calculations, we investigate formation pathways of glycolaldehyde and ethylene glycol based on HCO and CH 2 OH radical-radical recombinations. We also show that CH 2 OH is the main intermediate radical species in the H 2 CO to CH 3 OH hydrogenation processes. We then discuss astrophysical implications of the chemical pathway we propose on the observed gas-phase ethylene glycol and glycolaldehyde.
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