Quantification of segregation dynamics in ice mixtures
Karin I. \"Oberg, Edith C. Fayolle, Herma M. Cuppen, Ewine F. van, Dishoeck, Harold Linnartz

TL;DR
This study quantitatively investigates the segregation mechanisms and barriers in H2O:CO2 and H2O:CO ice mixtures under astrophysical conditions, revealing temperature-dependent surface and bulk processes relevant to star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative analysis of ice segregation mechanisms, barriers, and dynamics in astrophysically relevant ice mixtures, supported by experiments and simulations.
Findings
Thin ices segregate via surface processes followed by slow bulk diffusion.
Thicker ices segregate through a fast bulk process, possibly due to porosity or phase transition.
Surface segregation rates follow Arrhenius law with specific energy barriers.
Abstract
(Abridged) The observed presence of pure CO2 ice in protostellar envelopes is attributed to thermally induced ice segregation, but a lack of quantitative experimental data has prevented its use as a temperature probe. Quantitative segregation studies are also needed to characterize diffusion in ices, which underpins all ice dynamics and ice chemistry. This study aims to quantify the segregation mechanism and barriers in different H2O:CO2 and H2O:CO ice mixtures covering a range of astrophysically relevant ice thicknesses and mixture ratios. The ices are deposited at 16-50 K under (ultra-)high vacuum conditions. Segregation is then monitored at 23-70 K as a function of time, through infrared spectroscopy. Thin (8-37 ML) H2O:CO2/CO ice mixtures segregate sequentially through surface processes, followed by an order of magnitude slower bulk diffusion. Thicker ices (>100 ML) segregate…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
