4.6 Article

The Gas-phase Reaction of NH2 with Formaldehyde (CH2O) is not a Source of Formamide (NH2CHO) in Interstellar Environments

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 937, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ac8cef

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/T000287/1]
  2. ERC under the European Union [646758]
  3. University of Leeds
  4. STFC
  5. UKRI [ST/T000287/1, MR/T040726/1]

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The first experimental study of the low-temperature kinetics of the gas-phase reaction between NH2 and formaldehyde was performed, revealing that this reaction is not an important source of formamide in interstellar environments.
The first experimental study of the low-temperature kinetics of the gas-phase reaction of NH2 with formaldehyde (CH2O) has been performed. This reaction has previously been suggested as a source of formamide (NH2CHO) in interstellar environments. A pulsed Laval nozzle equipped with laser-flash photolysis and laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy was used to create and monitor the temporal decay of NH2 in the presence of CH2O. No loss of NH2 could be observed via reaction with CH2O, and we place an upper limit on the rate coefficient of <6 x 10(-12) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) at 34 K. Ab initio calculations of the potential energy surface were combined with Rice-Rampsberger-Kassel-Marcus (RRKM) calculations to predict a rate coefficient of 6.2 x 10(-14) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) at 35 K, consistent with the experimental results. The presence of a significant barrier, 18 kJ mol(-1), for the formation of formamide as a product, means that only the H-abstraction channel producing NH3 + CHO, in which the transfer of an H atom can occur by quantum mechanical tunneling through a 23 kJ mol(-1) barrier, is open at low temperatures. These results are in contrast with a recent theoretical study, which suggested that the reaction could proceed without a barrier and was therefore a viable route to gas-phase formamide formation. The calculated rate coefficients were used in an astrochemical model, which demonstrated that this reaction produces only negligible amounts of gas-phase formamide under interstellar and circumstellar conditions. The reaction of NH2 with CH2O is therefore not an important source of formamide at low temperatures in interstellar environments.

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