Methoxymethanol Formation Starting from CO-Hydrogenation
Jiao He, Mart Simons, Gleb Fedoseev, Ko-Ju Chuang, Danna Qasim, Thanja, Lamberts, Sergio Ioppolo, Brett A. McGuire, Herma Cuppen, and Harold Linnartz

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation of methoxymethanol in interstellar ices through experimental and theoretical methods, revealing that known radical recombination pathways are insufficient to explain observed abundances, suggesting additional mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first combined experimental and theoretical analysis of methoxymethanol formation via CO hydrogenation in interstellar ice analogs, highlighting gaps in current reaction network understanding.
Findings
Methoxymethanol forms via radical recombination of CH2OH and CH3O.
Experimental abundance of MM is about 0.05 relative to CH3OH.
Recombination efficiency alone cannot account for observed MM levels.
Abstract
Methoxymethanol (CH3OCH2OH, MM) has been identified through gas-phase signatures in both high- and low-mass star-forming regions. This molecule is expected to form upon hydrogen addition and abstraction reactions in CO-rich ice through radical recombination of CO hydrogenation products. The goal of this work is to investigate experimentally and theoretically the most likely solid-state MM reaction channel -- the recombination of CH2OH and CH3O radicals -- for dark interstellar cloud conditions and to compare the formation efficiency with that of other species that were shown to form along the CO-hydrogenation line. Hydrogen atoms and CO or H2CO molecules are co-deposited on top of the predeposited H2O ice to mimic the conditions associated with the beginning of 'rapid' CO freeze-out. Quadrupole mass spectrometry is used to analyze the gas-phase COM composition following a temperature…
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