| Literature DB >> 35011533 |
Luca Bizzocchi1,2, Silvia Alessandrini1,2, Mattia Melosso2,3, Víctor M Rivilla4,5, Cristina Puzzarini2.
Abstract
Phosphorous-containing molecules have a great relevance in prebiotic chemistry in view of the fact that phosphorous is a fundamental constituent of biomolecules, such as RNA, DNA, and ATP. Its biogenic importance has led astrochemists to investigate the possibility that P-bearing species could have formed in the interstellar medium (ISM) and subsequently been delivered to early Earth by rocky bodies. However, only two P-bearing molecules have been detected so far in the ISM, with the chemistry of interstellar phosphorous remaining poorly understood. Here, in order to shed further light on P-carriers in space, we report a theoretical spectroscopic characterisation of the rotational spectrum of POH in its 3A″ ground electronic state. State-of-the-art coupled-cluster schemes have been employed to derive rotational constants, centrifugal distortion terms, and most of the fine and hyperfine interaction parameters, while the electron spin-spin dipolar coupling has been investigated using the multi-configuration self-consistent-field method. The computed spectroscopic parameters have been used to simulate the appearance of triplet POH rotational and ro-vibrational spectra in different conditions, from cold to warm environments, either in gas-phase experiments or in molecular clouds. Finally, we point out that the predicted hyperfine structures represent a key pattern for the recognition of POH in laboratory and interstellar spectra.Entities:
Keywords: POH radical; astrochemistry; fine splitting; hyperfine structure; quantum chemistry
Year: 2022 PMID: 35011533 PMCID: PMC8746536 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27010302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Molecular structure of the singlet and triplet electronic states of HPO and POH as obtained at the ae-CCSD(T)/cc-pwCVQZ level of theory. Distances in Angstrom and angles in degrees.
| Parameter | Parameter | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1.4521 | 1.4244 |
| 0.9626 | 0.9605 |
|
| 1.4799 | 1.4989 |
| 1.6165 | 1.6346 |
|
| 104.54 | 114.88 |
| 111.79 | 113.92 |
Figure 1Structural parameters of POH and HPO along with the corresponding equilibrium rotational constants. Values at the “CC” level.
Computed rotational constants, centrifugal distortion parameters, and dipole moments of HPO and POH (Watson S-reduction, representation).
| Parameter | Unit | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| MHz | 311,681.77 | 734,899.81 |
|
| MHz | 20,013.26 | 16,590.40 |
|
| MHz | 18,694.47 | 16,184.70 |
|
| MHz | 0.0247 | 0.0264 |
|
| MHz | 2.57 | 2.20 |
|
| MHz | 127.26 | 509.0 |
|
| kHz | −1.47 | −0.53 |
|
| kHz | −0.64 | −0.06 |
|
| Hz | −0.12 | 0.012 |
|
| kHz | 0.051 | 0.004 |
|
| kHz | −4.65 | 5.87 |
|
| kHz | 222.5 | 1666.20 |
|
| mHz | 11.3 | 0.81 |
|
| mHz | 9.24 | 0.93 |
|
| mHz | 5.79 | 0.12 |
|
| D | 2.45 | 0.65 |
|
| D | 0.51 | 1.39 |
Computed fine and hyperfine parameters of HPO and POH.
| Parameter | Unit | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| MHz | 9043.22 | 9503.08 |
|
| MHz | 1538.29 | 11.23 |
|
| MHz | 604.16 | −41.22 |
|
| MHz | −50.82 | 4.32 |
|
| MHz | −116.53 | 10.01 |
|
| MHz | −461.71 | −51.99 |
|
| MHz | 759.78 | 115.90 |
|
| MHz | −259.02 | −617.40 |
|
| MHz | −116.71 | 334.04 |
|
| MHz | 375.73 | 283.35 |
|
| MHz | 183.90 | 10.05 |
|
| kHz | 108.84 | 31.84 |
|
| kHz | 49.80 | 45.46 |
|
| kHz | 43.05 | 40.98 |
|
| MHz | 196.92 | 24.64 |
|
| MHz | −11.048 | 6.78 |
|
| MHz | 9.712 | 6.73 |
|
| MHz | 1.335 | −13.51 |
|
| MHz | −17.741 | −20.36 |
|
| kHz | −29.09 | −64.52 |
|
| kHz | 2.03 | −0.27 |
|
| kHz | 1.54 | −2.08 |
Figure 2Spectral simulation of the transition of POH in the microwave band, as can be observed using a broadband spectrometer. The fine-structure is a triplet of lines spread over ~10 GHz. Each component is split in a number of closely spaced features by the hyperfine couplings. The y-axis scale indicates the absorption cross-section computed at 2 K, the typical rotational temperature obtained in a supersonic-jet cooled sample. See text for computational details.
Figure 3Far-infrared rotational spectrum (histogram) of POH computed at 300 K using the spectroscopic parameters of Table 2 and Table 3. The sharp-edge structures are produced by the b-type bands with beginning at . The y-axis scale indicates the absolute integrated intensity.
Figure 4Simulation of the emission spectrum of the transition of POH, as seen by the band 2b of the HIFI instrument onboard the former Herschel Space Telescope. The scale of the x-axis expresses the Doppler velocity shift with respect to the hypothetically pure rotational transition frequency GHz: . The y-axis represents the main beam antenna temperature in units of mK. See text for computational details.