Litcius/Paper detail

Vacuum-UV Photodesorption from Compact Amorphous Solid Water: Photon Energy Dependence, Isotopic and Temperature Effects

J.-H. Fillion, Rémi Dupuy, Géraldine Féraud, Claire Romanzin, L. Philippe, T. Putaud, V. Baglin, R. Cimino, Patrick Marie-Jeanne, Pascal Jeseck, X. Michaut, M. Bertin

2022ACS Earth and Space Chemistry17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Photodesorption from water-rich interstellar ice mantles is known to play an important role on the gas-to-ice ratio in stars and planet formation regions. Quantitative determination of the photodesorption yields in the laboratory is crucial to astrochemical models. This study presents for the first time, the photon-energy dependence of the photodesorption yields from water ice samples in the vacuum-UV (VUV) range. Experiments have been performed with the Surface Processes and ICES (SPICES) setup coupled to the DESIRS beamline at the SOLEIL synchrotron facility (St. Aubin, France). Thick (20–100 ML) compact amorphous solid water ices (H2O and D2O) grown onto a cold Au substrate have been irradiated at sample temperatures ranging from 15 to 110 K. Photodesorption yields of water and photoproducts have been obtained by mass-spectrometry from 7 to 13.5 eV. In interstellar conditions, average H2O photodesorption yields are (5 ± 2) × 10–4 molecule/photon at low temperature (15 K) whereas, lower yields, by a factor of ∼6–9 on average, were found for D2O. This strong isotopic effect can be explained by a differential chemical recombination between OH (OD) and H (D) photofragments at the surface of the samples. In addition, an enhancement of the yields above (70 ± 10) K suggests a thermally induced ice restructuration at this threshold temperature.

Topics & Concepts

Amorphous solidAstrochemistryAmorphous icePhoton energyBeamlineSynchrotronAnalytical Chemistry (journal)PhotonChemistryPhysicsChemical physicsInterstellar mediumAtomic physicsAstrophysicsOpticsCrystallographyEnvironmental chemistryBeam (structure)GalaxyAtmospheric Ozone and ClimateAstrophysics and Star Formation StudiesAtmospheric chemistry and aerosols