Fine-tuning the complex organic molecule formation: sulfur and CO ice as regulators of surface chemistry
D. Navarro-Almaida, A. Taillard, A. Fuente, P. Caselli, R. Mart\'in-Dom\'enech, and J. J. Miranzo-Pastor

TL;DR
This study combines gas-phase observations and chemical modeling to explore how sulfur and CO ices regulate the formation of complex organic molecules on grain surfaces in star-forming regions.
Contribution
It reveals the critical roles of sulfur depletion and CO ice growth in promoting molecular complexity during star and planet formation.
Findings
Sulfur depletion influences H$_{2}$S and CH$_{3}$OH abundances.
Decreasing binding energies in CO-rich ices affects molecule formation.
Sulfur sinks and hydrogen sequestration are key to chemical complexity.
Abstract
Grain-surface chemistry plays a crucial role in the formation of molecules of astrobiological interest, including HS and complex organic molecules (COMs). They are commonly observed in the gas phase toward star-forming regions, but their detection in ices remains limited. Combining gas-phase observations with chemical modeling is therefore essential for advancing our understanding of their chemistry. In this paper we investigate the factors that promote or hinder molecular complexity combining gas-phase observations of CHOH, HS, OCS, NH, and CO with chemical modeling in two dense cores: Barnard-1b and IC348. We observed millimeter emission lines of CHOH, HS, OCS, NH, and CO along strips using the IRAM 30m and Yebes 40m telescopes. We used the gas-grain chemical model \texttt{Nautilus} to reproduce the observed abundance…
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