Deuterium Isotope Fractionation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Meteorites as an Indicator of Interstellar/Protosolar Processing History
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Reduced Carbon Chemistry and the Early Evolution of the Solar System
1.2. The Role of Deuterium in Understanding the Origin of PAHs
2. Methods
Prevention of Volatile Loss and Limitation of Isotope Fractionation
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Generally Light Isotopic Values for Isolated PAHs
4.2. PAH Origin Estimations Based on D/H Trends with Ring Size
4.3. Parent-Body Alteration and PAH Deuterium Enrichment
4.4. Comparisons with Previous Data Indicate D/H Depletion in Soluble Species
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reaction/Environment | Mechanism/Location | Deuteration Pattern |
---|---|---|
Unimolecular photodissociation (warm and cold environments, UV photon-driven) | Gas-phase PAHs in interstellar medium or dense interstellar molecular clouds [29] | Smaller PAHs more enriched, no effect on >40 carbons |
Gas-phase ion–molecule (cold environments) | Gas-phase PAHs in cold dense interstellar molecular clouds or cold regions of protosolar disks [28,29] | No enrichment trend with molecule size or ring number |
Photo enrichment of PAHs in D-enriched ices (cold environments, UV photon-driven) | PAHs condensed in ices in dense interstellar molecular clouds or cold regions of protosolar disks [29] | No enrichment trend with molecule size or ring number (enrichment correlates with functionalization) |
Cyclization pathways (kinetic reactions in parent body) | Larger PAH formation by ring addition in chondrite parent body [40] | Differs between partially and fully aromatized PAHs |
Structure and Name | Formula Mass H/C | ALH 83100 δD (SMOW) | Murchison δD (SMOW) | LON 94101 δD (SMOW) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pyrene Family: Six-Membered Fully Aromatic (Alternant) PAHs | ||||
Naphthalene | C10H8 128 Da 0.8 | 7‰ ± 18‰ | 180‰ ± 70‰ | 46‰ ± 6‰ |
Phenanthrene | C14H10 178 Da 0.714 | −8‰ ± 50‰ | −170‰ ± 8‰ | −289‰ ± 57‰ |
Anthracene | C14H10 178 Da 0.714 | 169‰ ± 49‰ | n.d. | −192‰ ± 4‰ |
Chrysene | C18H12 228 Da 0.667 | −174‰ ± 166‰ | −272‰ ± 12‰ | −143‰ ± 154‰ |
Pyrene | C16H10 202 Da 0.625 | −10‰ ± 99‰ | −233‰ ± 7‰ | −238‰ ± 134‰ |
Benzo[a]pyrene | C20H12 252 Da 0.6 | −12‰ ± 7‰ | n.d. | n.d. |
Fluoranthene Family: Five-Membered Containing Fully or Partially Aromatic (Nonalternant) PAHs | ||||
Acenaphthylene | C12H8 152 Da 0.667 | 107‰ ± 7‰ | n.d. | n.d. |
Acenaphthene | C12H10 154 Da 0.833 | 58‰ ± 41‰ | n.d. | 65‰ ± 47‰ |
Fluorene | C13H10 166 Da 0.769 | 76‰ ± 14‰ | 59‰ ± 14‰ | −83‰ ± 102‰ |
Fluoranthene | C16H10 202 Da 0.625 | −23‰ ± 67‰ | n.d. | −450‰ ± 32‰ |
Benzo[j]fluoranthene | C20H12 252 Da 0.6 | 66‰ ± 25‰ | n.d. | n.d. |
Meteorite | Bulk Rock δD | Extraction Residue δD | IOM δD | Aromatic Fraction δD | Fluoranthene δD | Pyrene δD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A-881458 (CM2, very weakly heated) | +903‰ [47] | −219‰ [38] d | −168‰ [38] d | |||
LON 94101 (CM 2; 1.8 [43]/2.6 [44]) | −154.6 ± 3.1‰ [48] | −105 ± 0.06‰ b | +1093‰ [49] | −450 ± 32‰ b | −238 ± 134‰ b + 57‰ [39] e | |
Murchison (CM 2; 1.6 [43]/2.5 [44]) | −74.9 ± 0.9‰ [48] | −42 ± 0.06‰ b | +986‰ [47] +696‰ [49] +777 ± 27‰ [50] | +244‰ [37] c | −560‰ [38] d | −233 ± 7‰ [47] −421‰ [38] d +357 ± 30‰ [39] e |
ALH 83100 (CM ½; 1.1 [43]/2.0 [44]) | −201 ± 0.5‰ [41] | −155 ± 0.06‰b | +723 ± 11‰ [51] | −23 ± 67‰ b | −10‰ b | |
Orgueil (CI1; 1.1 [43]/2.1 a) | +138 ± 15.3‰ [48] | +980‰ [49] +972 ± 2‰ [51] +1360 ± 40‰ [36] | +602‰ [52] | +710‰ [52] |
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Graham, H.V.; Elsila, J.E.; Dworkin, J.P.; Sandford, S.A.; Aponte, J.C. Deuterium Isotope Fractionation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Meteorites as an Indicator of Interstellar/Protosolar Processing History. Life 2022, 12, 1368. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12091368
Graham HV, Elsila JE, Dworkin JP, Sandford SA, Aponte JC. Deuterium Isotope Fractionation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Meteorites as an Indicator of Interstellar/Protosolar Processing History. Life. 2022; 12(9):1368. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12091368
Chicago/Turabian StyleGraham, Heather V., Jamie E. Elsila, Jason P. Dworkin, Scott A. Sandford, and Jose C. Aponte. 2022. "Deuterium Isotope Fractionation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Meteorites as an Indicator of Interstellar/Protosolar Processing History" Life 12, no. 9: 1368. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12091368
APA StyleGraham, H. V., Elsila, J. E., Dworkin, J. P., Sandford, S. A., & Aponte, J. C. (2022). Deuterium Isotope Fractionation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Meteorites as an Indicator of Interstellar/Protosolar Processing History. Life, 12(9), 1368. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12091368