4.6 Article

First Experimental Confirmation of the CH3O + H2CO → CH3OH + HCO Reaction: Expanding the CH3OH Formation Mechanism in Interstellar Ices

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 931, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ac7158

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Danish National Research Foundation through the Center of Excellence InterCat [DNRF150]
  2. Dutch Astrochemistry Network II (DANII)
  3. NOVA (the Netherlands Research School for Astronomy)
  4. NWO via a VENI fellowship [722.017.008]
  5. Russian Ministry of Science and Higher Education via the State Assignment Contract [FEUZ-2020-0038]
  6. Royal Society

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Research shows that the formation of methanol in interstellar ices is an important pathway through the CH3O-induced abstraction reaction, rather than just the gradual addition of H atoms to CO. Experimental results and analytical techniques support this theory, while the isotope effect hinders the progress of another reaction pathway to some extent.
The successive addition of H atoms to CO in the solid phase has been hitherto regarded as the primary route to form methanol in dark molecular clouds. However, recent Monte Carlo simulations of interstellar ices alternatively suggested the radical-molecule H-atom abstraction reaction CH3O + H2CO -> CH3OH + HCO, in addition to CH3O + H -> CH3OH, as a very promising and possibly dominating (70%-90%) final step to form CH3OH in those environments. Here, we compare the contributions of these two steps leading to methanol by experimentally investigating hydrogenation reactions on H2CO and D2CO ices, which ensures comparable starting points between the two scenarios. The experiments are performed under ultrahigh vacuum conditions and astronomically relevant temperatures, with H:H2CO (or D2CO) flux ratios of 10:1 and 30:1. The radical-molecule route in the partially deuterated scenario, CHD2O + D2CO -> CHD2OD + DCO, is significantly hampered by the isotope effect in the D-abstraction process, and can thus be used as an artifice to probe the efficiency of this step. We observe a significantly smaller yield of D2CO + H products in comparison to H2CO + H, implying that the CH3O-induced abstraction route must play an important role in the formation of methanol in interstellar ices. Reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy and temperature-programmed desorption-quadrupole mass spectrometry analyses are used to quantify the species in the ice. Both analytical techniques indicate constant contributions of similar to 80% for the abstraction route in the 10-16 K interval, which agrees well with the Monte Carlo calculations. Additional H2CO + D experiments confirm these conclusions.

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