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Cryogenic Chemistry and Quantitative Non-Thermal Desorption from Pure Methanol Ices: High-Energy Electron versus X-Ray Induced Processes.

Daniela Torres-DiazRomain BasalgèteMathieu BertinJean-Hugues FillionXavier MichautLionel AmiaudAnne Lafosse
Published in: Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry (2023)
X-Ray irradiation of interstellar ice analogues has recently been proven to induce desorption of molecules, thus being a potential source for the still-unexplained presence of gaseous organics in the coldest regions of the interstellar medium, especially in protoplanetary disks. The proposed desorption mechanism involves the Auger decay of excited molecules following soft X-ray absorption, known as X-ray induced electron-stimulated desorption (XESD). Aiming to quantify electron induced desorption in XESD, we irradiated pure methanol (CH 3 OH) ices at 23 K with 505 eV electrons, to simulate the Auger electrons originating from the O 1s core absorption. Desorption yields of neutral fragments and the effective methanol depletion cross-section were quantitatively determined by mass spectrometry. We derived desorption yields in molecules per incident electron for CO, CO 2 , CH 3 OH, CH 4 /O, H 2 O, H 2 CO, C 2 H 6 and other less abundant but more complex organic products. We obtained desorption yields remarkably similar to XESD values.
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