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Ammonia snow-lines and ammonium salts desorption

Published 21 Apr 2021 in astro-ph.EP, astro-ph.IM, and physics.chem-ph | (2104.10464v1)

Abstract: Context. The nitrogen reservoir in planetary systems is a long standing problem. Part of the N-bearing molecules is probably incorporated into the ice bulk during the cold phases of the stellar evolution, and may be gradually released into the gas phase when the ice is heated, such as in active comets. The chemical nature of the N-reservoir should greatly influence how, when and in what form N returns to the gas phase, or is incorporated into the refractory material forming planetary bodies. Aims. We present the study the thermal desorption of two ammonium salts: ammonium formate and ammonium acetate from a gold surface and from a water ice substrate. Methods. Temperature-programmed desorption experiments and Fourier transform infrared reflection spectroscopy were conducted to investigate the desorption behavior of ammonium salts. Results. Ammonium salts are semi-volatile species releasing neutral species as major components upon desorption, that is ammonia and the corresponding organic acid (HCOOH and CH3COOH), at temperatures higher than the temperature of thermal desorption of water ice. Their desorption follows a first-order Wigner-Polanyi law. We find the first order kinetic parameters A = 7.7 $\pm$ 0.6 $\times$ 10${15}$ s${-1}$ and E${bind}$ = 68.9 $\pm$ 0.1 kJ~mol${-1}$ for ammonium formate and A = 3.0 $\pm$ 0.4 $\times$ 10${20}$ s${-1}$ and E${bind}$ = 83.0 $\pm$ 0.2 kJ~mol${-1}$ for ammonium acetate. The presence of a water ice substrate does not influence the desorption kinetics. Ammonia molecules locked in salts desorb as neutral molecules at temperatures much higher than previously expected that are usually attributed to refractory materials. Conclusions. Ammonia snow-line has a smaller radius than the water snow-line. As a result, the NH3/H2O ratio content in solar system bodies can be a hint as to where they formed and subsequently migrated.

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