On the Ionisation Fraction in Protoplanetary Disks II: The Effect of Turbulent Mixing on Gas--phase Chemistry
Martin Ilgner, Richard P. Nelson

TL;DR
This study investigates how turbulent mixing influences ionisation and chemistry in protoplanetary disks, revealing that metal abundance and diffusion can significantly affect magnetic coupling and turbulence sustainability.
Contribution
It demonstrates that turbulent mixing can alter ionisation structures and chemical pathways in disks, potentially enabling self-sustaining MHD turbulence under certain conditions.
Findings
Diffusion's effect depends on heavy metal abundance.
Metal presence above a threshold reduces dead zones.
Diffusion can change dominant chemical species.
Abstract
We calculate the ionisation fraction in protostellar disk models using two different gas-phase chemical networks, and examine the effect of turbulent mixing by modelling the diffusion of chemical species vertically through the disk. The aim is to determine in which regions of the disk gas can couple to a magnetic field and sustain MHD turbulence. We find that the effect of diffusion depends crucially on the elemental abundance of heavy metals (magnesium) included in the chemical model. In the absence of heavy metals, diffusion has essentially no effect on the ionisation structure of the disks, as the recombination time scale is much shorter than the turbulent diffusion time scale. When metals are included with an elemental abundance above a threshold value, the diffusion can dramatically reduce the size of the magnetically decoupled region, or even remove it altogther. For a complex…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
