Ice as a Photochemical Shield: Adsorption Energetics and Spectroscopic Modulation of Interstellar Thiocyanates HCSCN and HCSCCH in TMC-1
Saptarshi G. Dastider, Amit Singh Negi, Krishnakanta Mondal, Jobin Cyriac
TLDR
Computational study reveals interstellar thiocyanates on ice grains face a "Survival Paradox": thermal shielding vs. enhanced UV vulnerability.
Key contributions
- Computational study of HCSCN and HCSCCH adsorption on amorphous solid water (ASW) using water clusters.
- Identified heterogeneous binding sites on ice with desorption energies from 1500-4900 K and C=S Stark shifts.
- Uncovered a "Survival Paradox": deeply trapped molecules are thermally shielded but have enhanced UV absorption.
- Demonstrated gradual thermal desorption profiles for these species, not singular sublimation events, using UCLCHEM.
Why it matters
This paper provides crucial insights into the fate of interstellar sulfur-bearing molecules on ice grains. It highlights a novel "Survival Paradox" where thermal protection comes at the cost of increased UV vulnerability. These findings are vital for understanding the chemical evolution of star-forming regions.
Original Abstract
The recent detections of thioformyl cyanide (HCSCN) and propynethial (HCSCCH) in TMC-1 provide critical insights into the interstellar sulfur inventory, yet their sequestration and survivability on dust grain mantles remain poorly constrained. Here, we present a computational study of the site-specific adsorption of HCSCN and HCSCCH on amorphous solid water (ASW), modelled via water clusters (H2O)n, n = 6-16, at the wB97X-D/def2-TZVP level of theory, corroborated by QTAIM topological analyses and TD-DFT vertical excitations. Our results reveal a highly heterogeneous binding environment, with desorption energies spanning 1500 to 4900 K. Strongly bound cavity sites induce significant Stark shifts in the C=S stretching modes. Crucially, while the ice matrix exerts a negligible solvatochromic shift on UV transition wavelengths, deeply bound CN-cavity configurations exhibit a pronounced hyperchromic enhancement of the oscillator strength. Implementing these site-specific parameters into the UCLCHEM gas-grain code demonstrates that these species undergo a gradual thermal desorption profile rather than a singular sublimation event. Furthermore, the hyperchromic effect establishes a Survival Paradox: while deeply trapped populations are thermodynamically shielded against thermal desorption, they simultaneously possess enhanced UV absorption cross-sections, rendering them vulnerable to photodissociation by the interstellar radiation field prior to sublimation.
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