Chemical modeling for predicting the abundances of certain aldimines and amines in hot cores
Milan Sil, Prasanta Gorai, Ankan Das, Bratati Bhat, Emmanuel E. Etim, and Sandip K. Chakrabarti

TL;DR
This study uses quantum chemical calculations and chemical modeling to predict the presence of specific aldimines and amines in hot cores of the interstellar medium, guiding future astronomical detection efforts.
Contribution
It identifies new candidate molecules for detection in space and provides reaction pathways and modeling data to support their observability.
Findings
Ethylamine and (1Z)-1-propanimine are promising detection candidates.
These molecules can be efficiently formed in hot-core regions.
Radiative transfer modeling supports their potential observability.
Abstract
We consider six isomeric groups (CH3N, CH5N, C2H5N, C2H7N, C3H7N and C3H9N) to review the presence of amines and aldimines within the interstellar medium (ISM). Each of these groups contains at least one aldimine or amine. Methanimine (CH2NH) from CH3N and methylamine (CH3NH2) from CH5N isomeric group were detected a few decades ago. Recently, the presence of ethanimine (CH3CHNH) from C2H5N isomeric group has been discovered in the ISM. This prompted us to investigate the possibility of detecting any aldimine or amine from the very next three isomeric groups in this sequence: C2H7N, C3H7N and C3H9N. We employ high-level quantum chemical calculations to estimate accurate energies of all the species. According to enthalpies of formation, optimized energies, and expected intensity ratio, we found that ethylamine (precursor of glycine) from C2H7N isomeric group, (1Z)-1-propanimine from…
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