CO2-rich protoplanetary discs as a probe of dust radial drift & trapping
Andrew D. Sellek, Marissa Vlasblom, Ewine F. van Dishoeck

TL;DR
This study models how dust grain radial drift and trapping in protoplanetary discs influence inner disc chemistry, especially the CO2/H2O ratio, providing potential observational diagnostics of disc evolution and dust dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a 1D disc evolution model incorporating dust trapping effects to predict chemical phase transitions and spectral signatures in protoplanetary discs.
Findings
Radial drift causes initial H2O-rich then CO2-rich phases in discs.
Dust trapping accelerates phase transition and increases CO2/H2O ratio.
CO2/H2O ratio in spectra is a robust tracer less affected by dust obscuration.
Abstract
MIR spectra imply considerable chemical diversity in the inner regions of protoplanetary discs: some are H2O-dominated, others by CO2. Sublimating ices from radially drifting dust grains are often invoked to explain some of this diversity, particularly the H2O-rich discs. We use a 1D protoplanetary disc evolution code to model how radially drifting dust grains that transport ices inwards to snowlines impact the chemistry of the inner regions of protoplanetary discs. We explore differences between smooth discs and those where radial drift is impeded by dust trapping outside gas gaps and quantify the effects of gap location and formation time. Discs evolve through an initial H2O-rich phase due to sublimating ices, followed by a CO2-rich phase as H2O vapour advects onto the star and CO2 advects into the inner disc from its snowline. The inclusion of traps hastens the transition between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure
