Aromatics and Cyclic Molecules in Molecular Clouds: a New Dimension of Interstellar Organic Chemistry

Aromatics and Cyclic Molecules in Molecular Clouds: a New Dimension of Interstellar Organic Chemistry

Aromatics and Cyclic Molecules in Molecular Clouds: A New Dimension of Interstellar Organic Chemistry Michael C. McCarthy∗,y and Brett A. McGuirez,{,y yCenter for Astrophysics j Harvard & Smithsonian, 60 Garden Street, Cambridge MA 02138, USA zDepartment of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA {National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Charlottesville, VA 22903, USA E-mail: [email protected] Abstract 1 Introduction Astrochemistry lies at the nexus of astronomy, chem- Astrochemistry is a thriving sub-discipline of astron- istry, and molecular physics. On the basis of precise omy. Driven by the construction of increasing powerful laboratory data, a rich collection of more than 200 fa- radio facilities during the past 50 years, and the con- miliar and exotic molecules have been identified in the current astronomical discovery of both well-known and interstellar medium, the vast majority by their unique highly unusual molecules, primarily via their rotational rotational fingerprint. Despite this large body of work, spectra, we know now with great confidence that the in- there is scant evidence in the radio band for the ba- terstellar medium — the space between stars — harbors sic building blocks of chemistry on earth – five and an astonishing rich chemical inventory. 1 The detection six-membered rings – despite long standing and sus- and study of molecules in space is not a mere chemical tained efforts during the past 50 years. In contrast, curiosity. Rather, molecules are significant reservoirs of a peculiar structural motif, highly unsaturated carbon chemically active elements, and equally importantly are in a chain-like arrangement, is instead quite common in exquisite probes of the chemical and physical conditions space. The recent astronomical detection of cyanoben- of the regions in which they reside. Although molecular zene, the simplest aromatic nitrile, in the dark molec- hydrogen (H2) is by far the most abundant molecule (by ular cloud TMC-1, and soon afterwards in additional three to four orders of magnitude), it is extremely diffi- pre-stellar, and possibly protostellar sources, establishes cult to observe directly since this homonuclear diatomic that aromatic chemistry is likely widespread in the ear- only possesses weak quadrupole-allowed transitions in liest stages of star formation. The subsequent discovery the infrared. 2 As a consequence, and despite consider- of cyanocyclopentadienes and even cyanonapthlenes in ably lower abundance, polar molecules serve as highly TMC-1 provides further evidence that organic molecules convenient and sensitive tracers of molecular gas. of considerable complexity are readily synthesized in One of the most remarkable themes to emerge since regions with high visual extinction but where the low the advent of molecular astrophysics in the early to mid- temperature and pressure are remarkably low. This re- 1960s is the preponderance of highly unsaturated car- view focuses on laboratory efforts now underway to un- bon chains, 3 an unusual structural motif that is gener- derstand the rich transition region between linear and ally uncommon on earth. This trend is partly a result of planar carbon structures using microwave spectroscopy. selection effects: linear molecules have simple, harmon- We present key features, advantages, and disadvantages ically related rotational transitions and favorable parti- arXiv:2103.09608v1 [astro-ph.GA] 17 Mar 2021 of current detection methods, a discussion of the types tion functions compared to rings, which makes their ro- of molecules found in space and in the laboratory, and tational spectra easier to identify in the laboratory and approaches under development to identify entirely new in space. It is also partly due to kinetic factors: ion- species in complex mixtures. Studies focusing on the neutral and many neutral-neutral reactions are known cyanation of hydrocarbons and the formation of ben- to proceed rapidly even at very low temperature. 4 A zene from acyclic precursors are highlighted, as is the key pathway is the polymerization of hydrocarbons by role that isotopic studies might play in elucidating the reactions with atomic and diatomic carbon 5–8 to form a chemical pathways to ring formation. variety of acetylenic or cumulenic chains, some as long 9 as HC11N. As a point of comparison, excepting very recent discoveries, the 20 astronomical molecules with a comparable number of carbon atoms to benzene c- C6H6, the simplest six-membered ring, are all acyclic chains. The vast majority of the more than 110 polar 1 polyatomic ISM molecules fall close to the prolate limit CN (κ = −1, i.e. cigar-shaped), a trend that becomes even more pronounced as the the number of heavy atoms in the molecule increases. cyanobenzene In contrast, terrestrial organic chemistry is domi- nated by molecules containing five- and six-membered CN rings, which frequently serve as the building blocks of polymers and many biological compounds. It is esti- mated, for example, that nearly 80% of the roughly CN 135 M organic compounds registered in Chemical Ab- 1-cyano-1,3-cyclopentadiene 2-cyano-1,3-cyclopentadiene stracts Service (CAS) contain one such ring. 10 For this reason, it is deeply paradoxical that no polar deriva- CN tive of benzene or a conjugated ring had been identi- fied in space prior to 2018, despite long standing and CN sustained efforts 11–16 since the discovery of OH rad- ical in 1963. 17 This paradox is further deepened be- cause much larger organic molecules, polycyclic aro- 1-cyanonapthelene 2-cyanonapthelene matic hydrocarbons (PAHs) 18,19 composed of two or more fused benzene rings are widely believed to be re- Figure 1: Structures and common chemical names of the five aro- 20 matic or cyclic molecules that have recently been discovered in the sponsible for the Unidentified Infrared Bands (UIRs), dark molecular cloud TMC-1 on the basis of precise laboratory rest a prominent set of emission features observed at mid-IR frequencies using the 100 m Green Bank Telescope. wavelengths (roughly from 3 to 13 µm). These bands are ubiquitous in our galaxy and external ones, and may account for perhaps as much as 25% of all inter- to synthesize at least one small aromatic ring are vi- stellar carbon. 21 While until this year no single PAH able even at extremely low temperature and pressure. had been definitively detected at any wavelength in Second, the ease with which this aromatic was subse- space, there is compelling circumstantial evidence for quently detected in near a half-dozen other molecular 29 this class of molecules based on the frequency coinci- clouds points to the generality of this chemistry in dence of strong infrared emission features with the char- early star formation, rather than an anomaly specific acteristic C–C, C–H, etc. vibrations of aromatic rings to one source. Third, in rapid succession, evidence 30,31 32 and sp2-hybridized carbon. was then found for five-membered and bicyclic Owing to the lack of observational data in the rich CN-functionalized rings in TMC-1 (Fig. 1). Somewhat transition region between linear and planar carbon remarkably, their derived abundances exceed, in some structures, much uncertainty surrounds the connection, cases by several orders of magnitude, those predicted if any, between these two apparently disparate reser- from chemical models which well reproduce the abun- voirs of carbon. Although it was widely assumed early dance of various carbon chains irrespective of length, on that formation of most molecules would proceed via a indicating the chemistry responsible for planar carbon bottom-up approach, top-down arguments have gained structures is favorable but not well understood relative significant traction in the last decade, 22–24 particularly to carbon chains. in light of the recent detection of the highly symmet- These new findings have opened up an entirely new 25 + 26 and largely unexplored area of organic chemistry in rical fullerenes, C60,C70, and C60 , which appear unlikely to be formed with any appreciable efficiency via space: complex carbon chemistry in regions with high a series of step-wise reactions from small molecules. visual extinction but where the pressure is many orders Several recent astronomical observations, however, of lower than terrestrially and the cloud temperature is may have begun to shed light on this longstanding 10 K or less. It should be noted that the presence of CN- conundrum. First, radio lines of cyanobenzene, c- functionalized hydrocarbons such as cyanobenzene in TMC-1 and elsewhere serves as a faithful proxy for the C6H5CN, the simplest aromatic nitrile (Fig. 1), were recently observed in the starless core TMC-1. 27 The parent hydrocarbon, e.g., benzene, because reactions Taurus molecular cloud complex is the nearest large of unsaturated hydrocarbons with CN, a highly abun- star formation region to us, and within it lies TMC- dant radical in most molecular clouds, are generally 33–35 1 which is at a very early evolutionary phase (pre- exothermic and barrierless. Furthermore, cyano- collapse) characterized by a simple, well-constrained, derivatives are very favorable targets for radio detec- and homogeneous physical environment. It is a rich tion because they have substantial dipole moments and source of unsaturated carbon-chain molecules, includ- therefore bright rotational spectra. In turn, this set ing cyanopolyynes, acetylenic free radicals, and cumu- of discoveries has spawned a multitude of unanswered lene carbenes, with many observed in high abundance. 28 questions, including what other aromatic molecules ex- Detection in a cold cloud implies aromatic chemistry is ist in molecular clouds (Fig. 2), what pathways are re- not a phenomenon confined solely to the initial facto- sponsible for their formation, the importance of physical ries of certain carbon-rich stars. Rather, mechanisms conditions and initial elemental reservoirs in aromatic 2 N N be made with great confidence. This situation arises first because rest frequencies can be determined to an accuracy of one part in 106 or better (e.g., to a fre- quency uncertainty of ≤10 kHz at 10 GHz) in the labo- ratory.

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