The Astrochemistry Low-energy Electron Cross-Section (ALeCS) database I. Semi-empirical electron-impact ionization cross-section calculations and ionization rates
Journal article, 2024

Context.
Electron–molecule interaction is a fundamental process in radiation-driven chemistry in space, from the interstellar medium to comets. Therefore, knowledge of interaction cross sections is key. There have been a plethora of both theoretical and experimental studies of total ionization cross sections spanning from diatomics to complex organics. However, the data are often spread over many sources or are not public or readily available. Aims. We introduce the Astrochemistry Low-energy Electron cross-section (ALeCS) database. This is a public database for electron interaction cross sections and ionization rates for molecules of astrochemical interest. In particular, we present here the first data release, comprising total ionization cross sections and ionization rates for over 200 neutral molecules.
Methods.
We include optimized geometries and molecular orbital energies at various levels of quantum chemistry theory. Furthermore, for a subset of the molecules, we have calculated ionization potentials. We computed the total ionization cross sections using the binary-encounter Bethe model and screening-corrected additivity rule, and we computed ionization rates and reaction network coefficients for molecular cloud environments.
Results.
We present the cross sections and reaction rates for >200 neutral molecules ranging from diatomics to complex organics, with the largest being C14H10. We find that the screening-corrected additivity rule cross sections generally significantly overestimate experimental total ionization cross sections. We demonstrate that our binary-encounter Bethe cross sections agree well with experimental data. We show that the ionization rates scale roughly linearly with the number of constituent atoms in the molecule.
Conclusions.
We introduce and describe the public ALeCS database. For the initial release, we include total ionization cross sections for >200 neutral molecules and several cations and anions calculated with different levels of quantum chemistry theory, the chemical reaction rates for the ionization, and network files in the formats of the two most popular astrochemical networks: the Kinetic Database for Astrochemistry, and UMIST. The database will be continuously updated for more molecules and interactions.

molecular data

ISM: molecules

astrochemistry

molecular processes

cosmic rays

Author

Brandt Gaches

The University of Texas at Austin

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Astronomy and Plasmaphysics

Tommaso Grassi

Max Planck Society

Stefan Vogt-Geisse

University of Concepcion

Giulia M. Bovolenta

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

University of Concepcion

Claire Vallance

University of Oxford

David Heathcote

University of Oxford

M. Padovani

Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory

Stefano Bovino

Sapienza University of Rome

Istituto di Radioastronomia

University of Concepcion

Prasanta Gorai

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Astronomy and Plasmaphysics

Astronomy and Astrophysics

0004-6361 (ISSN) 1432-0746 (eISSN)

Vol. 684 A41

Subject Categories

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/202348293

More information

Latest update

4/16/2024