Combined crossed molecular beams and computational study on the N(<sup>2</sup>D) + HCCCN(X<sup>1</sup>Σ<sup>+</sup>) reaction and implications for extra-terrestrial environments

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Liang, P., Mancini, L., Marchione, D., Vanuzzo, G., Ferlin, F., Recio, P., … Balucani, N. (2022). Combined crossed molecular beams and computational study on the N(2D) + HCCCN(X1Σ+) reaction and implications for extra-terrestrial environments. Molecular Physics, 120(1–2). https://doi.org/10.1080/00268976.2021.1948126

Abstract

The reaction of the nitrogen atom (N) in its first electronically excited state (2D) with cyanoacetylene (HC3N) has been investigated under single-collision conditions by using the crossed molecular beam method with mass spectrometric detection at a collision energy of 31 kJ mol−1. With the support of electronic structure calculations, we found that this reaction proceeds via the barrierless addition of the N(2D) atom to the carbon–carbon triple bond of HC3N, followed by the formation of a cyclic intermediate adduct HC(N)CCN, which dissociates to C(N)CCN + H products or isomerises to a more stable intermediate HNCCCN by H-migration and ring-opening processes. The long-lived HNCCCN complex produces the linear 3Σg– ground state dicyanocarbene (NCCCN) radical plus atomic hydrogen through a barrierless unimolecular dissociation accompanied by a negligible competitive channel forming the NCCCN radical (1A1) with a bent C2v structure plus H. The main product of this neutral-neutral reaction is the 3NCCCN radical that could be a potential precursor to form other nitriles (C2N2, C3N) or more complex organic species in planetary atmospheres, such as that of Titan and Pluto, in cometary comas, and in UV irradiated interstellar environments.

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Received 28 May 2021, Accepted 20 Jun 2021, Published online: 05 Jul 2021 The authors thank Isabelle Couturier-Tamburelli (Aix-Marseille Université-PIIM, Marseille, FR), Murthy Gudipati (JPL, USA) and Benjamin Fleury (JPL, USA) for kindly sharing their experience in synthesising and handling of HC3N. Y. T. acknowledges financial support from the extra-[EU ERASMUS+ program (Academic Year 2019/2020)]. This work was supported by the Italian Space Agency (ASI, DC-VUM-2017-034, Grant n° 2019–3 U.O Life in Space) and by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 811312 for the project ‘Astro-Chemical Origins’ (ACO).

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