Revised gas-phase formation network of methyl cyanide: the origin of methyl cyanide and methanol abundance correlation in hot corinos
Lisa Giani, Cecilia Ceccarelli, Luca Mancini, Eleonora Bianchi,, Fernando Pirani, Marzio Rosi, Nadia Balucani

TL;DR
This study revises the gas-phase formation network of methyl cyanide, correcting reaction data, proposing new pathways, and explaining the observed abundance correlation with methanol in hot corinos.
Contribution
The paper provides a corrected and expanded gas-phase reaction network for methyl cyanide, including new reactions and quantum calculations, improving astrochemical models.
Findings
Radiative association of CH3+ and HCN is the main formation route.
New reactions significantly impact methyl cyanide formation in warm environments.
Model predictions agree well with observed methyl cyanide abundances.
Abstract
Methyl cyanide (CHCN) is one of the most abundant and widely spread interstellar complex organic molecules (iCOMs). Several studies found that, in hot corinos, methyl cyanide and methanol abundances are correlated suggesting a chemical link, often interpreted as a synthesis of them on the interstellar grain surfaces. In this article, we present a revised network of the reactions forming methyl cyanide in the gas-phase. We carried out an exhaustive review of the gas-phase CHCN formation routes, propose two new reactions and performed new quantum mechanics computations of several reactions. We found that 13 of the 15 reactions reported in the databases KIDA and UDfA have incorrect products and/or rate constants. The new corrected reaction network contains 10 reactions leading to methyl cyanide. We tested the relative importance of those reactions in forming CHCN using our…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure
