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H2 Formation on Grain Surfaces
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2006
Abstract
Molecular hydrogen is the most abundant molecule in the Universe and dominates the mass budget of the gas, particularly in regions of star formation. H2 is also an important chemical intermediate in the formation of larger species and can be an important gas coolant when the medium lacks metals. Because of the inefficiency of gas-phase reactions to form H2, this molecule is generally thought to form on grain surfaces. Observations of H2 in a wide variety of objects showed that this molecule could form efficiently over a wide range of physical conditions. To understand the mechanism responsible for such an efficient formation, we developed a model for molecular hydrogen formation on grain surfaces. This model considers the interaction between atom and surface as beeing either weak (Van der Waals interaction—physisorption) or strong (covalent bound—chemisorption), as well as the mobility of the atom on a surface due to
quantum mechanical diffusion and thermal hopping. This model solves the time-dependent kinetic rate equation for the formation of molecular hydrogen and its deuterated forms. Our results have been benchmarked with laboratory experiments on silicates, carbonaceous and graphitic surfaces. This comparison allowed us to derive some characteristics of the considered surfaces. An extension of our model to astrophysical conditions gives an estimate of H2 formation efficiency for a wide range of physical conditions. One of our main results is the efficient formation of molecular hydrogen for gas and grain temperatures up to several hundreds of kelvins. We also compared our predictions to observations in astrophysical objects such as photodissociation regions (PDRs). The addition of deuterium in our model for the formation of HD and D2 molecules is also discussed.
- Type
- Contributed Papers
- Information
- Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union , Volume 1 , Symposium S231: Astrochemistry: Recent Successes and Current Challenges , August 2005 , pp. 325 - 336
- Copyright
- 2006 International Astronomical Union
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