Gas-phase and model ice-surface reactions of S(1D) with water and methanol: a computational investigation and implications for cosmochemistry/astrochemistry

03 October 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Gas-phase reactions of atomic sulfur in its first electronically excited metastable state, S(1D), with water and methanol have been theoretically investigated to characterize their potential energy surfaces, the reaction mechanisms, and product branching fractions. According to our results, both reactions proceed with the formation of bound intermediates that, for the isolated systems, decompose into products because of the large energy content with which they are formed. The SO(a 1Δ) + H2 channel is the only open for the S(1D) + H2O reaction, while many channels are open for the S(1D) + CH3OH reaction. For the latter case, statistical estimates of the product branching fractions indicate that the main channels are those leading to CH2OH + SH, H2CO + H2S, H2CS + H2O, and CH3 + HSO. The mechanism of the related O(1D) + CH3SH reaction has also been unveiled. Since the reaction intermediates can be stabilized by energy loss to surrounding species on ice or in liquid water, to gain some insight into the possible effects of water molecules we have also analyzed how the two reactions behave when four additional water molecules are added. The conclusion is that the initial intermediates formed by the insertion or addition mechanism − namely HOSH (hydrogen thioperoxide) and H2OS for S(1D) + H2O and CH2OHSH (mercaptomethanol), CH4OS and CH3OSH (methyl thioperoxide) for S(1D) + CH3OH, as well as CH3SOH (methyl sulfenic acid) for O(1D) + CH3SH − will probably be stabilized by the interaction with the additional water molecules. Our results can help in understanding sulfur chemistry in space, especially in the case of comets. On one side, the S(1D) + H2O gas-phase reaction could account for the additional SO source necessary to explain the observed distribution of this species obtained by using the Plateau de Bure interferometer of Institut de Radioastronomie Millim´etrique (IRAM) for the Hale Bopp comet. On the other side, some of the S/O-containing molecules identified by ROSINA (Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis) during the enhanced dust emission events of the 67/P comet (e.g. species with gross formula HSO, H2SO, and CH4OS) could be the results of the chemistry occurring on ice that we have exposed in this work.

Keywords

Chemistry of metastable electronically excited species
Chemisty of comets
Chemistry of interstellar ice

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Results of calculations
Description
- Tables with electronic single-point energies for the systems: S(1D) + H2O (isolated), S(1D) + CH3OH (isolated), S(1D) + H2O in the presence of four additional water molecules, S(1D) + CH3OH in the presence of four additional water molecules. - Cartesian and Internal coordinates of the structures of the identified intermediates, transition states, and products. • Figures S1-S2: optimized structures of the identified intermediates, transition states, and products.
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