Methanol ice VUV photoprocessing: GC-MS analysis of volatile organic compounds

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Abstract

Next to water, methanol is one of the most abundant molecules in astrophysical ices. A new experimental approach is presented here for the direct monitoring via gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC-MS) of a sublimating photoprocessed pure methanol ice. Unprecedentedly, in a same analysis, compelling evidences for the formation of 33 volatile organic compounds are provided. The latter are C1-C6 products including alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, esters, ethers and carboxylic acids. Few C3 and all C4 detected compounds have been identified for the first time. Tentative detections of few C5 and C6 compounds are also presented. GC-MS allows for the first time the direct quantification of C2-C4 photoproducts and shows that their abundances decrease with the increase of their carbon chain length. These qualitative and quantitative measurements provide important complementary results to previous experiments, and present interesting similarities with observations of sources rich in methanol.

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Abou Mrad, N., Duvernay, F., Chiavassa, T., & Danger, G. (2016). Methanol ice VUV photoprocessing: GC-MS analysis of volatile organic compounds. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 458(2), 1234–1241. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw346

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