Photodesorption of H2O, HDO, and D2O ice and its impact on fractionation
Carina Arasa (1,2), Jesper Koning (1), Geert-Jan Kroes (1), Catherine, Walsh (2), and Ewine F. van Dishoeck (2,3) ((1) Gorlaeus Laboratories, Leiden, Institute of Chemistry, Leiden University, P. O. Box 9502, 2300 RA Leiden,, The Netherlands, (2) Leiden Observatory

TL;DR
This study models the photodesorption processes of water ice isotopologues, revealing isotope effects and their implications for interpreting the HDO/H2O ratio in astrophysical environments, with no fractionation during photodesorption but potential enrichment over time.
Contribution
It provides new fitting formulas for photodesorption efficiencies of water isotopologues and investigates isotope effects and fractionation during photodesorption in astrochemical models.
Findings
H atom photodesorption from H2O is 1.1 times D atom from D2O.
HDO/H2O ratio in ice is preserved during photodesorption.
Photodesorption can enrich ice in D atoms over time.
Abstract
The HDO/H2O ratio in interstellar gas is often used to draw conclusions on the origin of water in star-forming regions and on Earth. In cold cores and in the outer regions of protoplanetary disks, gas-phase water comes from photodesorption of water ice. We present fitting formulae for implementation in astrochemical models using photodesorption efficiencies for all water ice isotopologues obtained using classical molecular dynamics simulations. We investigate if the gas-phase HDO/H2O ratio reflects that present in the ice or whether fractionation can occur during photodesorption. Probabilities for the top four monolayers are presented for photodesorption of X (X=H,D) atoms, OX radicals, and X2O and HDO molecules following photodissociation of H2O, D2O, and HDO in H2O amorphous ice at temperatures from 10-100 K. Isotope effects are found for all products: (1) H atom photodesorption…
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