Surface astrochemistry: a computational chemistry perspective

Authors: H. M. Cuppen, A. Fredon, T. Lamberts, E. M. Penteado, M. Simons, C. Walsh

Astrochemistry VII -- Through the Cosmos from Galaxies to Planets", proceedings of the IAU Symposium No. 332, 2017, Puerto Varas, Chile; eds. M. Cunningham, T. Millar and Y. Aikawa,p 293 - 304
arXiv: 2202.04992v1 - DOI (astro-ph.GA)
(12 pages, 8 figures)
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Abstract: Molecules in space are synthesized via a large variety of gas-phase reactions, and reactions on dust-grain surfaces, where the surface acts as a catalyst. Especially, saturated, hydrogen-rich molecules are formed through surface chemistry. Astrochemical models have developed over the decades to understand the molecular processes in the interstellar medium, taking into account grain surface chemistry. However, essential input information for gas-grain models, such as binding energies of molecules to the surface, have been derived experimentally only for a handful of species, leaving hundreds of species with highly uncertain estimates. Moreover, some fundamental processes are not well enough constrained to implement these into the models. The proceedings gives three examples how computational chemistry techniques can help answer fundamental questions regarding grain surface chemistry.

Submitted to arXiv on 10 Feb. 2022

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