Impact of Size-dependent Grain Temperature on Gas-Grain Chemistry in Protoplanetary Disks: the case of low mass star disks
S. Gavino, A. Dutrey, V. Wakelam, S. Guilloteau, J. Kobus, S. Wolf, W., Iqbal, E. Di Folco, E. Chapillon, V. Pi\'etu

TL;DR
This study investigates how size-dependent grain temperatures influence gas-grain chemistry in protoplanetary disks around low-mass stars, revealing that multi-grain models significantly affect molecular composition and snowline distribution.
Contribution
It introduces a multi-grain chemical model that accounts for size-dependent grain temperatures, improving upon single-grain models in simulating disk chemistry.
Findings
Warmer grains enhance complex organic molecule formation.
Single-grain models are sensitive to assumed grain temperature.
Size-dependent temperatures cause a spread in snowline locations.
Abstract
Grain surface chemistry is key to the composition of protoplanetary disks around young stars. The temperature of grains depends on their size. We evaluate the impact of this temperature dependence on the disk chemistry. We model a moderately massive disk with 16 different grain sizes. We use POLARIS to calculate the dust grain temperatures and the local UV flux. We model the chemistry using the 3-phase astrochemical code NAUTILUS. Photoprocesses are handled using frequency-dependent cross-sections, and a new method to account for self and mutual shielding. The multi-grain model outputs are compared to those of single-grain size models (0.1 m), with two different assumptions for their equivalent temperature. We find that the Langmuir-Hinshelwood (LH) mechanism at equilibrium temperature is not efficient to form H at 3-4 scale heights (), and adopt a parametric fit to a…
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