PhD Defense of Mr. Samuel DEL FRÉ

PCMT Soutenance de thèse Doctorants
CERLA Amphitheater

DEL FR Samuel, PhLAM Laboratory - UMR8523 - Team PCMT

Title: Theoretical studies of the photodesorption of interstellar molecular ice analogs: application to carbon monoxide

Jury: M. MONNERVILLE (PhLAM, encadrant), D. DUFLOS (PhLAM, encadrant), A. R. SANTAMARIA (PhLAM, encadrant), F. INGROSSO (Université de Lorraine, Rapporteur), P. LARREGARAY (Université de Bordeaux, Rapporteur), J.-H. FILLION (Sorbonne Université, membre), C. CLAVAGUERA (Université de Paris Saclay, membre), C. CRESPOS (Université de Bordeaux, membre)

Abstract:

Unusual amounts of gas-phase molecules are detected in the cold regions (around 10 K) of the interstellar medium (ISM), primarily attributed to the non-thermal desorption of molecules from ices deposited on dust grains. In particular, vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) photon-induced desorption (photodesorption) is considered a major desorption pathway in photon-dominated regions of the ISM. Experimental investigations have revealed that in pure carbon monoxide (CO) ices, a ubiquitous species in the ISM, VUV photodesorption can follow an indirect mechanism of desorption induced by electronic transitions (DIET) for photons with energy between 7 and 10 eV. Nevertheless, the understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms remains a topic of scientific debate. In this astrochemical context, we present a combined theoretical study using ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) based on density functional theory (DFT) and machine learning potentials (PML) constructed with artificial neural networks (ANN) to study the final part of the DIET mechanism in amorphous CO ices. Here, a highly vibrationally excited CO molecule (v = 40) at the center of an aggregate initially composed of 50 CO molecules, optimized and then thermalized at 15 K, triggers the indirect desorption of surface molecules. Our theoretical results reveal that the desorption process consists of three fundamental steps, beginning with a mutual attraction between the vibrationally excited molecule and one or two neighboring molecules, activated by CO bond stretching and facilitated by the steric effect of surrounding molecules. This is followed by a sequence of energy transfers initiated by a collision, resulting in the desorption of vibrationally cold CO molecules in 88% of the AIMD trajectories. Additionally, the theoretical distributions of the internal and translational energy of desorbed molecules remarkably match experimental results, supporting the crucial role of vibrational relaxation in the desorption process. Finally, the first PML constructed from AIMD simulations accurately fit the multidimensional potential energy surface of the system, allowing efficient prediction of aggregate energies and atomic forces. Classical molecular dynamics simulations using these potentials are over 1800 times faster than those based on AIMD while offering precision comparable to DFT.


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