Binding energies of ethanol and ethylamine on interstellar water ices: synergy between theory and experiments
Jessica Perrero, Julie Vitorino, Emanuele Congiu, Piero Ugliengo,, Albert Rimola, Fran\c{c}ois Dulieu

TL;DR
This study combines experimental and computational methods to determine the binding energies of ethanol and ethylamine on interstellar water ices, providing insights into their behavior in space and implications for planet formation.
Contribution
It presents a synergistic approach using DFT calculations and TPD experiments to accurately characterize binding energies of interstellar molecules on water ices, advancing astrochemical modeling.
Findings
Ethanol and ethylamine exhibit higher desorption temperatures on water ice than on gold.
Computed binding energies suggest molecules are frozen at water snow-lines in protoplanetary disks.
Ethylamine layers are weaker than ethanol and water layers based on cohesive energy analysis.
Abstract
Experimental and computational chemistry are two disciplines to conduct research in Astrochemistry, providing essential reference data for both astronomical observations and modeling. These approaches not only mutually support each other, but also serve as complementary tools to overcome their respective limitations. We characterized the binding energies (BEs) of ethanol (CHCHOH) and ethylamine (CHCHNH), two interstellar complex organic molecules (iCOMs), onto crystalline and amorphous water ices through density functional theory (DFT) calculations and temperature programmed desorption (TPD) experiments. Experimentally, CHCHOH and CHCHNH behave similarly, in which desorption temperatures are higher on the water ices than on a bare gold surface. Computed cohesive energies of pure ethanol and ethylamine bulk structures allow describing the BEs of…
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