Gas-grain models for interstellar anion chemistry
M. A. Cordiner, S. B Charnley

TL;DR
This paper develops gas-grain chemical models to explain the observed abundances of interstellar hydrocarbon anions, emphasizing the roles of dust interactions, cosmic rays, and oxygen depletion in dense molecular clouds.
Contribution
It introduces new gas-grain models that incorporate accretion and cosmic-ray desorption, successfully reproducing observed anion-to-neutral ratios and explaining high abundances without warm chemistry.
Findings
Models match observed anion-to-neutral ratios.
Oxygen depletion increases carbon-chain anion abundances.
Cosmic-ray desorption stabilizes anion ratios over time.
Abstract
Long-chain hydrocarbon anions CnH- (n=4, 6, 8) have recently been found to be abundant in a variety of interstellar clouds. In order to explain their large abundances in the denser (prestellar/protostellar) environments, new chemical models are constructed that include gas-grain interactions. Models including accretion of gas-phase species onto dust grains and cosmic-ray-induced desorption of atoms are able to reproduce the observed anion-to-neutral ratios, as well as the absolute abundances of anionic and neutral carbon chains, with a reasonable degree of accuracy. Due to their destructive effects, the depletion of oxygen atoms onto dust results in substantially greater polyyne and anion abundances in high-density gas (with n_{H_2} >~ 10^5 cm^{-3}). The large abundances of carbon-chain-bearing species observed in the envelopes of protostars such as L1527 can thus be explained without…
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