STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M....

11
STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Reggie L. Hudson Eckerd College 61 st International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy The Ohio State University June 2006

description

H + beam from vdG accelerator

Transcript of STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M....

Page 1: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES

Robert F. FerranteMorgan M. SpiliotisU.S. Naval Academy

Marla H. MooreNASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Reggie L. HudsonEckerd College

61st International Symposium on Molecular SpectroscopyThe Ohio State University

June 2006

Page 2: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

Ehrenfreund, P. and Fraser, H, “Ice Chemistry in Space”, Solid State Astronomy,NATO ASI Series, V. Pirronello and J. Krelowski, eds., Kluwer Academic Publ. (2002).

 

ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS OF OCS

Page 3: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

H+ beam from vdGaccelerator

Page 4: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

2500 2000 1500 1000

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

C3O2 C2OHCO

CS2

after irradiation

before irradiation

9.0 K; CO:H2S = 5:1dose = 1.0x1014 H+/cm2

OCS

COCO2

H2S

IRRADIATION OF H2S IN CO

Rela

tive

Abso

rban

ce

Wavenumbers (cm-1)

Page 5: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

2500 2000 1500 1000

-0.1

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

SOSO3

9.0 K; CO:SO2 = 5:1dose = 1.0x1014 H+/cm2

OCSSO2

SO2

COCO2

after irradiation

before irradiation

IRRADIATION OF SO2 IN CO

Rela

tive

Abso

rban

ce

Wavenumbers (cm-1)

Page 6: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

2500 2000 1500 1000

-0.1

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

C3S2

C3S2CS

OCS

9.0 K; CO:CS2 = 5:1dose = 1.0x1014 H+/cm2

after irradiation

before irradiation

CO

CO2

CS2

IRRADIATION OF CS2 IN CO

Rela

tive

Abso

rban

ce

Wavenumbers (cm-1)

Page 7: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

0.0 1.0x1014 2.0x1014 3.0x1014 4.0x1014

0.00

0.02

0.04

0.06

0.08

0.10

SO2

CS2

H2S

T~10 K

PRODUCTION OF OCS BY PROTON IRRADIATION

No

rmal

ized

OCS

Col

umn

Dens

ity (m

olec

OCS

/ in

itial

ato

m S

)

Radiation Dose (H+/cm2)

CO : H2S CO : CS2 CO : SO2 CO2 : H2S CO2 : CS2 CO2 : SO2

Page 8: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

-2.5

-2.0

-1.5

-1.0

-0.5

0.0 CS2

SO2

H2S

OCSpure icesT~10 K

RADIATION DESTRUCTION OF SULFUR COMPOUNDS

Ln (N

orm

. Col

umn

Dens

ity)

Dose (eV/molec)

Page 9: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600

-0.4

-0.3

-0.2

-0.1

0.0

0.1

0.2 COOCS2 SO2

SO2 CS2

CS2T~10K

1.5x1014 H+/cm2

1.0x1014 H+/cm2

5.0x1013 H+/cm2

2.5x1013 H+/cm2

1.0x1013 H+/cm2

before irradiation

IRRADIATION OF PURE OCS

Rela

tive

Abso

rban

ce

Wavenumbers (cm-1)

Page 10: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

SO2H2SCO CO2

THERMAL BEHAVIOR OF OCS PRODUCT

Norm

aliz

ed A

rea

OCS

205

0 cm

-1 B

and

Temperature (K)

CO:H2S CO2:H2S CO:SO2 CO2:SO2

Page 11: STUDIES OF THE FORMATION OF CARBONYL SULFIDE IN ION-IRRADIATED ICES Robert F. Ferrante Morgan M. Spiliotis U.S. Naval Academy Marla H. Moore NASA/Goddard.

RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS

OCS is readily formed by solid-state processes in low-temperature ices subjected to proton irradiation

- additional thermal activation not required- H2S > SO2 > CS2 as sulfur source

OCS is relatively unstable to destruction by irradiation

- significantly more labile than other S species:

OCS > H2S >> SO2 > CS2

- readily forms SO2 and CS2 on prolonged exposure

OCS formation enhanced by thermal processing in some systems