Laboratory H2O:CO2 ice desorption data: entrapment dependencies and its parameterization with an extended three-phase model
Edith C. Fayolle, Karin I. Oberg, Herma M. Cuppen, Ruud Visser, and, Harold Linnartz

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how volatile entrapment in water ice depends on ice properties and introduces an extended three-phase model to accurately describe ice desorption processes relevant to astrophysics.
Contribution
It provides new experimental data on volatile entrapment in water ice and develops an extended three-phase model with minimal parameters for better desorption predictions.
Findings
Entrapment of CO2 increases with ice thickness and mixture ratio.
The extended three-phase model accurately reproduces entrapment and desorption behavior.
Model applicability extends to other interstellar ice species.
Abstract
Ice desorption affects the evolution of the gas-phase chemistry during the protostellar stage, and also determines the chemical composition of comets forming in circumstellar disks. From observations, most volatile species are found in H2O-dominated ices. The aim of this study is first to experimentally determine how entrapment of volatiles in H2O ice depends on ice thickness, mixture ratio and heating rate, and second, to introduce an extended three-phase model (gas, ice surface and ice mantle) to describe ice mixture desorption with a minimum number of free parameters. Thermal H2O:CO2 ice desorption is investigated in temperature programmed desorption experiments of thin (10 - 40 ML) ice mixtures under ultra-high vacuum conditions. Desorption is simultaneously monitored by mass spectrometry and reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy. The H2O:CO2 experiments are complemented with…
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