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Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices

[Image: see text] In the interstellar medium, six molecules have been conclusively detected in the solid state in interstellar ices, and a few dozen have been hypothesized and modeled to be present in the solid state as well. The icy mantles covering micrometer-sized dust grains are, in fact, though...

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Autores principales: Ferrari, Brian C., Molpeceres, Germán, Kästner, Johannes, Aikawa, Yuri, van Hemert, Marc, Meyer, Jörg, Lamberts, Thanja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10364131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37492630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00086
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author Ferrari, Brian C.
Molpeceres, Germán
Kästner, Johannes
Aikawa, Yuri
van Hemert, Marc
Meyer, Jörg
Lamberts, Thanja
author_facet Ferrari, Brian C.
Molpeceres, Germán
Kästner, Johannes
Aikawa, Yuri
van Hemert, Marc
Meyer, Jörg
Lamberts, Thanja
author_sort Ferrari, Brian C.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] In the interstellar medium, six molecules have been conclusively detected in the solid state in interstellar ices, and a few dozen have been hypothesized and modeled to be present in the solid state as well. The icy mantles covering micrometer-sized dust grains are, in fact, thought to be at the core of complex molecule formation as a consequence of the local high density of molecules that are simultaneously adsorbed. From a structural perspective, the icy mantle is considered to be layered, with an amorphous water-rich inner layer surrounding the dust grain, covered by an amorphous CO-rich outer layer. Moreover, recent studies have suggested that the CO-rich layer might be crystalline and possibly even be segregated as a single crystal atop the ice mantle. If so, there are far-reaching consequences for the formation of more complex organic molecules, such as methanol and sugars, that use CO as a backbone. Validation of these claims requires further investigation, in particular on acquiring atomistic insight into surface processes, such as adsorption, diffusion, and reactivity on CO ices. Here, we present the first detailed computational study toward treating the weak interaction of (pure) CO ices. We provide a benchmark of the performance of various density functional theory methods in treating the binding of pure CO ices. Furthermore, we perform an atomistic and in-depth study of the binding energy of CO on amorphous and crystalline CO ices using a pair-potential-based force field. We find that CO adsorption is represented by a large distribution of binding energies (200–1600 K) on amorphous CO, including a significant amount of weak binding sites (<350 K). Increasing both the cluster size and the number of neighbors increases the mean of the observed binding energy distribution. Finally, we find that CO binding energies are dominated by dispersion and, as such, exchange-correlation functionals need to include a treatment of dispersion to accurately simulate surface processes on CO ices. In particular, we find the ωB97M-V functional to be a strong candidate for such simulations.
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spelling pubmed-103641312023-07-25 Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices Ferrari, Brian C. Molpeceres, Germán Kästner, Johannes Aikawa, Yuri van Hemert, Marc Meyer, Jörg Lamberts, Thanja ACS Earth Space Chem [Image: see text] In the interstellar medium, six molecules have been conclusively detected in the solid state in interstellar ices, and a few dozen have been hypothesized and modeled to be present in the solid state as well. The icy mantles covering micrometer-sized dust grains are, in fact, thought to be at the core of complex molecule formation as a consequence of the local high density of molecules that are simultaneously adsorbed. From a structural perspective, the icy mantle is considered to be layered, with an amorphous water-rich inner layer surrounding the dust grain, covered by an amorphous CO-rich outer layer. Moreover, recent studies have suggested that the CO-rich layer might be crystalline and possibly even be segregated as a single crystal atop the ice mantle. If so, there are far-reaching consequences for the formation of more complex organic molecules, such as methanol and sugars, that use CO as a backbone. Validation of these claims requires further investigation, in particular on acquiring atomistic insight into surface processes, such as adsorption, diffusion, and reactivity on CO ices. Here, we present the first detailed computational study toward treating the weak interaction of (pure) CO ices. We provide a benchmark of the performance of various density functional theory methods in treating the binding of pure CO ices. Furthermore, we perform an atomistic and in-depth study of the binding energy of CO on amorphous and crystalline CO ices using a pair-potential-based force field. We find that CO adsorption is represented by a large distribution of binding energies (200–1600 K) on amorphous CO, including a significant amount of weak binding sites (<350 K). Increasing both the cluster size and the number of neighbors increases the mean of the observed binding energy distribution. Finally, we find that CO binding energies are dominated by dispersion and, as such, exchange-correlation functionals need to include a treatment of dispersion to accurately simulate surface processes on CO ices. In particular, we find the ωB97M-V functional to be a strong candidate for such simulations. American Chemical Society 2023-06-14 /pmc/articles/PMC10364131/ /pubmed/37492630 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00086 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Ferrari, Brian C.
Molpeceres, Germán
Kästner, Johannes
Aikawa, Yuri
van Hemert, Marc
Meyer, Jörg
Lamberts, Thanja
Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices
title Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices
title_full Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices
title_fullStr Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices
title_full_unstemmed Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices
title_short Floating in Space: How to Treat the Weak Interaction between CO Molecules in Interstellar Ices
title_sort floating in space: how to treat the weak interaction between co molecules in interstellar ices
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10364131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37492630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00086
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