H-atom addition and abstraction reactions in mixed CO, H2CO and CH3OH ices: an extended view on complex organic molecule formation
K.-J. Chuang, G. Fedoseev, S. Ioppolo, E. F. van Dishoeck, H., Linnartz

TL;DR
This study investigates how complex organic molecules form in cold dark clouds through H-atom addition and abstraction reactions on ice grains, revealing new pathways that do not require external energy sources like UV light.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of H-atom abstraction reactions in ice mantles, expanding understanding of COM formation pathways in cold interstellar environments.
Findings
H2CO can both form and be destroyed via H-atom reactions.
Abstraction reactions produce reactive radicals enhancing COM formation.
Radical-radical recombination occurs without UV or cosmic ray triggers.
Abstract
Complex organic molecules (COMs) have been observed not only in the hot cores surrounding low- and high- mass protostars, but also in cold dark clouds. Therefore, it is interesting to understand how such species can be formed without the presence of embedded energy sources. We present new laboratory experiments on the low-temperature solid state formation of three complex molecules: methyl formate (HC(O)OCH3), glycolaldehyde (HC(O)CH2OH) and ethylene glycol (H2C(OH)CH2OH), through recombination of free radicals formed via H-atom addition and abstraction reactions at different stages in the CO-H2CO-CH3OH hydrogenation network at 15 K. The experiments extend previous CO hydrogenation studies and aim at resembling the physical&chemical conditions typical of the CO freeze-out stage in dark molecular clouds, when H2CO and CH3OH form by recombination of accreting CO molecules and H-atoms on…
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