Oxygen atom addition and insertion reactions may provide a pathway to chemical complexity in ices that are too cold for radicals to diffuse and react. We have studied the ice-phase reactions of photoproduced oxygen atoms with C 2 hydrocarbons under ISM-like conditions. The main products of oxygen atom reactions with ethane are ethanol and acetaldehyde; with ethylene are ethylene oxide and acetaldehyde; and with acetylene is ketene. The derived branching ratio from ethane to ethanol is ∼0.74 and from ethylene to ethylene oxide is ∼0.47. For all three hydrocarbons, there is evidence of an effectively barrierless reaction with O( 1 D) to form oxygen-bearing organic products; in the case of ethylene, there may be an additional barriered contribution of the ground-state O( 3 P) atom. Thus, oxygen atom reactions with saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons are a promising pathway to chemical complexity even at very low temperatures where the diffusion of radical species is thermally inaccessible.
CITATION STYLE
Bergner, J. B., Öberg, K. I., & Rajappan, M. (2019). Oxygen Atom Reactions with C 2 H 6 , C 2 H 4 , and C 2 H 2 in Ices. The Astrophysical Journal, 874(2), 115. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab07b2
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.