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2.
J Phys Chem A ; 115(14): 3087-94, 2011 Apr 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21428427

ABSTRACT

The potential energy surface (PES) for the formation of C(4)H(4)(•+) from the pyridine radical cation by loss of HCN was determined from quantum chemical calculations using the G3//B3LYP method. The complete reaction pathways for the formation of the low-energy C(4)H(4)(•+) isomers, radical cations of methylenecyclopropene (MCP(•+)), vinylacteylene (VA(•+)), cyclobutadiene, and butatriene were obtained. Based on the PESs, a Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus model calculation was performed to investigate the dissociation kinetics. The calculated dissociation rate constants agreed with the previous experimental data. It was predicted that a mixture of MCP(•+) and VA(•+) was formed by loss of HCN. The formation of MCP(•+) was more favored near the dissociation threshold and at high energies, whereas the formation of VA(•+) was more favored at the low energies corresponding to the ion lifetime of microseconds.


Subject(s)
Pyridines/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Cations/chemistry , Free Radicals/chemical synthesis , Free Radicals/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Kinetics , Thermodynamics
3.
Environ Sci Technol ; 44(10): 3719-23, 2010 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20415414

ABSTRACT

Understanding the conversion of coal-N during gasification is an important part of the development of gasification-based power generation technologies to reduce NO(x) emissions from coal utilization. This study investigated the conversion of coal-N in the presence of NO during the gasification of three rank-ordered coals and their chars in steam and low-concentration O(2). Our results show that NO can be incorporated into the char structure during gasification. The inherent char-N and the N incorporated into the char from NO-char reactions behave very similarly during gasification. During the gasification in steam, significant amounts of HCN and NH(3) can be formed from the incorporated N structure in char, especially for the relatively "aged" chars, mainly due to the availability of abundant H radicals on the char surface during the gasification in steam. During the gasification in 2000 ppm O(2), the formation of HCN or NH(3) from the N structures in char, including those incorporated into the char from the NO-char reactions, was not a favored route of reaction mainly due to the lack of H on char surface in the presence of O(2).


Subject(s)
Ammonia/chemical synthesis , Coal , Gases/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Nitric Oxide/chemistry , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
4.
Environ Sci Technol ; 44(8): 3028-34, 2010 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20302333

ABSTRACT

Primary data for the temperature dependent solubility of HCN in water do not presently exist for low concentrations of HCN at environmentally or physiologically relevant temperatures. Henry's Law constant (K(H), M/atm) for the vapor-solution equilibrium of HCN was determined in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer (adjusted to pH 9.00 +/- 0.03 at 296.6 +/- 0.1 K) from 287-311 K. Stable gas phase concentrations of HCN are generated by established techniques, via air equilibration of aqueous cyanide partitioned by a microporous membrane. The effluent gaseous HCN, in equilibrium with the constant temperature aqueous cyanide, was collected in dilute NaOH and determined by a spectrophotometrically using cobinamide. The K(H) of HCN may be expressed as ln K(H) (M/atm) = (8205.7 +/- 341.9)/T - (25.323 +/- 1.144); r(2) = 0.9914) where T is the absolute temperature in K. This corresponds to 9.02 and 3.00 M/atm at 25 and 37.4 degrees C, respectively, compared to actual measurements of 9.86 and 3.22 at 25.0 and 37.8 degrees C, respectively. The technique also allows for convenient generation of trace levels of HCN at ppbv-ppmv levels that can be further diluted.


Subject(s)
Gases , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Temperature , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis
5.
Astrobiology ; 5(5): 632-50, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16225436

ABSTRACT

Pre-cometary ice located around star-forming regions contains molecules that are pre-biotic compounds or pre-biotic precursors. Molecular line surveys of hot cores provide information on the composition of the ice since it sublimates near these sites. We have combined a hydrostatic hot core model with a complex network of chemical reactions to calculate the time-dependent abundances of molecules, ions, and radicals. The model considers the interaction between the ice and gas phase. It is applied to the Orion hot core where high-mass star formation occurs, and to the solar-mass binary protostar system IRAS 16293-2422. Our calculations show that at the end of the hot core phase both star-forming sites produce the same prebiotic CN-bearing molecules. However, in the Orion hot core these molecules are formed in larger abundances. A comparison of the calculated values with the abundances derived from the observed line data requires a chemically unprocessed molecular cloud as the initial state of hot core evolution. Thus, it appears that these objects are formed at a much younger cloud stage than previously thought. This implies that the ice phase of the young clouds does not contain CN-bearing molecules in large abundances before the hot core has been formed. The pre-biotic molecules synthesized in hot cores cause a chemical enrichment in the gas phase and in the pre-cometary ice. This enrichment is thought to be an important extraterrestrial aspect of the formation of life on Earth and elsewhere.


Subject(s)
Astronomy , Chemistry , Ice , Acetonitriles/chemical synthesis , Ammonia/chemistry , Astronomical Phenomena , Chemical Phenomena , Extraterrestrial Environment , Helium/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Kinetics , Methanol/chemistry , Models, Chemical
6.
J Biotechnol ; 111(1): 31-9, 2004 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15196767

ABSTRACT

The progress curves of conversion of racemic-mandelonitrile (R-MN) at different concentrations to benzaldehyde (BA) and hydrogen cyanide (HCN), catalyzed by S-hydroxynitrile lyase from Hevea brasiliensis, together with the enantiomeric excess curves of R-MN are converted into individual progress curves of the S- and R-enantiomers. They reveal that, under the prevailing experimental conditions, the non-enzymatic conversion is sufficiently slow compared to its enzyme-catalyzed counterpart, so that it can be ignored in a simplified analysis. Tikhonov regularization is then used to convert the progress curves of the S-enantiomer into reaction rate curves. These curves are used to determine the rate constants in the rate expression based on a three-step reversible ordered Uni-Bi reaction scheme that describes this enzyme-catalyzed reaction. The resulting rate constants are compared against published data. Some of the problems encountered and their solution are briefly discussed.


Subject(s)
Acetonitriles/chemistry , Aldehyde-Lyases/chemistry , Algorithms , Benzaldehydes/chemical synthesis , Hevea/enzymology , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Models, Chemical , Numerical Analysis, Computer-Assisted , Catalysis , Computer Simulation , Enzyme Activation , Isomerism , Kinetics , Substrate Specificity
7.
Lasers Surg Med ; 31(4): 230-2, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12355566

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: To independently test previously reported findings of cyanide evolution under holmium:yttrium aluminum garnet (Ho:YAG) (holmium) lithotripsy of uric acid calculi, determine if this occurs with other forms of intracorporeal lithotripsy, and establish if this occurs due to a photothermal, photochemical, or photoacoustic reaction. STUDY DESIGN/MATERIALS AND METHODS: Human uric acid calculi were fragmented in vitro through exposure to holmium, ultrasound, and electrohydraulic (EHL) energy sources. The following parameters were varied: total laser energy, individual laser pulse energy, ultrasonic energies, and EHL energies. Uric acid powder was suspended in solution and exposed to holmium laser energy in vitro. Serum and irrigant samples from a human patient were collected following intrarenal holmium lithotripsy of a uric acid calculus. All samples were analyzed for hydrogen cyanide (HCN) content. RESULTS: Holmium lithotripsy of solid uric acid calculi produces cyanide. The yield is linearly dependent upon total laser energy delivered. Pulse energy does not affect cyanide yield. Photothermal mechanisms coupling laser energy to the solid crystal lattice are responsible for the production of cyanide. Ultrasound and EHL lithotripsy do not produce cyanide. A clinically insignificant level of cyanide was detected in the blood of a single patient following laser lithotripsy of a uric acid calculus. CONCLUSIONS: Our study confirms that cyanide is produced by a photothermal mechanism during holmium laser lithotripsy of uric acid calculi, and that the amount produced is clinically insignificant.


Subject(s)
Holmium/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Lithotripsy, Laser , Uric Acid/chemistry , Urinary Calculi/therapy , Yttrium/chemistry , Holmium/radiation effects , Hot Temperature , Humans , Hydrogen Cyanide/analysis , In Vitro Techniques , Light , Uric Acid/radiation effects , Yttrium/radiation effects
8.
Adv Space Res ; 27(2): 201-6, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11605634

ABSTRACT

A mixture of possible Martian volcanic gases were reproduced and irradiated by a high-energy infrared laser to reproduce the effects of lightning on the production of prebiotic molecules. The analysis of products were performed by a gas chromatograph interfaced in parallel with a FTIR-detector and a quadrupole mass spectrometer equipped with an electron impact and chemical ionization modes. The main products identified were hydrocarbons and an uncharacterized yellow film deposit. Preliminary results indicate the presence of hydrogen cyanide among the resultant compounds.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Chemical , Lightning , Mars , Volcanic Eruptions , Evolution, Planetary , Exobiology , Extraterrestrial Environment/chemistry , Hydrogen/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Lasers , Methane/chemistry , Nitrogen/chemistry , Water/chemistry
9.
Adv Space Res ; 27(2): 271-82, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11605642

ABSTRACT

Although lightning has not been observed in Titan's atmosphere, the presence of methane rain in the troposphere suggests the possibility of electrical activity in the form of corona and/or lightning discharges. Here we examine the chemical effects of these electrical processes on a Titan simulated atmosphere composed of CH4 in N2 at various mixing ratios. Corona discharges were simulated in two different experimental arrays. For the detection of reactive intermediates we used a mass spectrometer to study the main positive ions arising by bombarding low-energy electrons from a hot filament into low-pressure methane. The final stable products, generated by applying a high voltage in a coaxial reactor with either positive or negative polarity, were separated and detected by gas chromatography-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and electron impact mass spectrometry (GC-FTIR-MS). Lightning discharges were simulated by a hot and dense plasma generated by a Nd-YAG laser and the final products were separated and detected by GC-FTIR-MS. Corona discharges produce linear and branched hydrocarbons as well as nitriles whereas lightning discharges generate mainly unsaturated hydrocarbons and nitriles. Lightning discharges are about 2 orders of magnitude more efficient in product formation than corona discharges.


Subject(s)
Atmosphere/chemistry , Electricity , Hydrocarbons/chemical synthesis , Nitriles/chemical synthesis , Saturn , Acetylene/chemical synthesis , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Ions/analysis , Lasers , Methane/chemistry , Nitrogen/chemistry , Organic Chemicals/chemical synthesis , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
10.
Astrophys J ; 534(2 Pt 1): 801-8, 2000 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11543516

ABSTRACT

We have investigated the effects induced by ion bombardment of mixtures containing nitrogen-bearing compounds at low temperatures. The results show the formation of a band at 2080 cm-1 in binary mixtures, NH3:CH4 and N2:CH4, which we attribute to HCN embedded in the organic residue formed by ion irradiation. In addition to this band, ternary mixtures containing an oxygen-bearing species (i.e., H2O) form a compound with a prominent absorption band at about 2165 cm-1 (4.62 microns). We ascribe this band to a nitrile compound containing O that is bonded to the organic residue. A detailed comparison of the laboratory results with astronomical data of the 4.62 microns absorption band in protostellar spectra shows good agreement in peak position and profile. Our experimental studies show that N2, which is a more likely interstellar ice component than NH3, can be the molecular progenitor of the carrier of the interstellar band. This is an alternative to the pathway by which UV photolysis of NH3-containing ices produces the 4.62 microns band and implies that ion bombardment may well play an important role in the evolution of interstellar ices. Here, we discuss the implications of our studies for the chemical route by which the carrier of the 4.62 microns band is formed in these laboratory experiments.


Subject(s)
Ammonia/chemistry , Ice/analysis , Ions , Methane/chemistry , Nitrogen/chemistry , Ammonia/radiation effects , Argon , Astronomical Phenomena , Astronomy , Carbon Monoxide/chemistry , Carbon Monoxide/radiation effects , Exobiology , Extraterrestrial Environment , Helium , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Methane/radiation effects , Nitriles/chemical synthesis , Nitriles/chemistry , Nitrogen/radiation effects , Nitrogen Compounds/chemistry , Nitrogen Compounds/radiation effects , Spectrophotometry, Infrared
11.
Adv Space Res ; 19(7): 1135-44, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11541342

ABSTRACT

Laboratory experiments simulating organic synthesis in Neptune's atmosphere have been performed. We have submitted to a spark discharge gaseous mixtures containing 9 mbar of molecular nitrogen and 3 mbar of methane (the p(N2)/p(CH4) ratio is compatible with upper limits in Neptune's stratosphere) with varying quantities of molecular hydrogen. The spark discharge is used to model the energetic electrons produced by the impact of cosmic rays on the high atmosphere of Neptune. HCN is synthesized in the described experimental conditions, even with a low mixing ratio of molecular nitrogen. Studying the variation of HCN production with the initial composition of the gas mixture and extrapolating to high mixing ratio of molecular hydrogen allows to estimate HCN production in Neptune's atmosphere. The computed HCN production flux is 7x10(7) m-2 s-1, which is two orders of magnitude lower than the value predicted by chemical models for an internal source of N atoms. The major uncertainty in our extrapolation is the energetic distribution of electrons, implicitly assumed comparable in the discharge and in Neptune's atmosphere. We note that this distribution is also a source of uncertainty in chemical models. The chemical mechanism responsible for the local formation of HCN in the stratosphere probably occurs in the reactor too. We propose a simple characterization of the spark discharge. We thus link the molecular nitrogen dissociation cross section by electron impact to the measured parameters of the experiments (current, voltage, initial partial pressures) and to the resulting HCN partial pressures. However, other laboratory experiments with larger hydrogen pressures, requiring a more powerful electric source, have to be performed to yield a value of the cross section.


Subject(s)
Atmosphere/chemistry , Electrons , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Models, Chemical , Neptune , Atmospheric Pressure , Electrochemistry , Extraterrestrial Environment , Methane/chemistry , Nitrogen/chemistry
12.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 26(2): 111-29, 1996 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536749

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen cyanide is the starting material for a diverse array of prebiotic syntheses, including those of amino acids and purines. Hydrogen cyanide also reacts with ferrous ions to give ferrocyanide, and so it is possible that ferrocyanide was common in the early ocean. This can only be true if the hydrogen cyanide concentration was high enough and the rate of reaction of cyanide with ferrous ions was fast enough. We show experimentally that the rate of formation of ferrocyanide is rapid even at low concentrations of hydrogen cyanide in the pH range 6-8, and therefore an equilibrium calculation is valid. The equilibrium concentrations of ferrocyanide are calculated as a function of hydrogen cyanide concentration, pH and temperature. The steady state concentration of hydrogen cyanide depends on the rate of synthesis by electric discharges and ultraviolet light and the rate of hydrolysis, which depends on pH and temperature. Our conclusions show that ferrocyanide was a major species in the prebiotic ocean only at the highest production rates of hydrogen cyanide in a strongly reducing atmosphere and at temperatures of 0 degrees C or less, although small amounts would have been present at lower hydrogen cyanide production rates. The prebiotic application of ferrocyanide as a source of hydrated electrons, as a photochemical replication process, and in semi-permeable membranes is discussed.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Chemical , Ferricyanides/chemistry , Ferrocyanides/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Earth, Planet , Ferricyanides/analysis , Ferrocyanides/analysis , Ferrocyanides/chemical synthesis , Formaldehyde/chemistry , Geological Phenomena , Geology , Hydrogen Cyanide/analysis , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Photochemistry , Potassium Cyanide/chemistry , Seawater/chemistry , Temperature
13.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 25(1-3): 161-73, 1995 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536668

ABSTRACT

Submarine hydrothermal systems on the early Earth may have been the sites from which life emerged. The potential for Strecker synthesis to produce biomolecules (amino and hydroxy acids) from starting compounds (ketones, aldehydes, HCN and ammonia) in such environments is evaluated quantitatively using thermodynamic data and parameters for the revised Helgeson-Kirkham-Flowers (HKF) equation of state. Although there is an overwhelming thermodynamic drive to form biomolecules by the Strecker synthesis at hydrothermal conditions, the availability and concentration of starting compounds limit the efficiency and productivity of Strecker reactions. Mechanisms for concentrating reactant compounds could help overcome this problem, but other mechanisms for production of biomolecules may have been required to produce the required compounds on the early Earth. Geochemical constraints imposed by hydrothermal systems provide important clues for determining the potential of these and other systems as sites for the emergence of life.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/chemical synthesis , Evolution, Chemical , Hydroxy Acids/chemical synthesis , Models, Chemical , Origin of Life , Thermodynamics , Aldehydes/chemistry , Ammonia/chemistry , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Formaldehyde/chemistry , Glycine/chemical synthesis , Glycolates/chemical synthesis , Hot Temperature , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Hydroxy Acids/chemistry , Marine Biology , Seawater
14.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 24(1): 1-17, 1994 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536656

ABSTRACT

The sources and speciation of reduced carbon and nitrogen inferred for the early Archean are reviewed in terms of current observations and models, and known chemical reactions. Within this framework hydrogen cyanide and cyanide ion in significant concentration would have been eliminated by reaction with excess formaldehyde to form cyanohydrin (glycolonitrile), and with ferrous ion to form ferrocyanide. Natural reactions of these molecules would under such conditions deserve special consideration in modeling of primordial organochemical processes. As a step in this direction, transformation reactions have been investigated involving glycolonitrile in the presence of water. We find that glycolonitrile, formed from formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide or cyanide ion, spontaneously cyclodimerizes to 4-amino-2-hydroxymethyloxazole. The crystalline dimer is the major product at low temperature (approximately 0 degrees C); the yield diminishes with increasing temperature at the expense of polymerization and hydrolysis products. Hydrolysis of glycolonitrile and of oxazole yields a number of simpler organic molecules, including ammonia and glycolamide. The spontaneous polymerization of glycolonitrile and its dimer gives rise to soluble, cationic oligomers of as yet unknown structure, and, unless arrested, to a viscous liquid, insoluble in water. A loss of cyanide by reaction with formaldehyde, inferred for the early terrestrial hydrosphere and cryosphere would present a dilemma for hypotheses invoking cyanide and related compounds as concentrated reactants capable of forming biomolecular precursor species. Attempts to escape from its horns may take advantage of the efficient concentration and separation of cyanide as solid ferriferrocyanide, and most directly of reactions of glycolonitrile and its derivatives.


Subject(s)
Acetonitriles/chemical synthesis , Cyanides/chemistry , Evolution, Chemical , Formaldehyde/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Acetonitriles/chemistry , Acetylation , Carbon/analysis , Cold Temperature , Crystallization , Cyanides/chemical synthesis , Evolution, Planetary , Formaldehyde/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen/analysis , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Mass Spectrometry , Nitrogen/analysis , Spectrophotometry, Infrared
15.
Can J Chem ; 72: 678-94, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11540502

ABSTRACT

Matthews (1992) has proposed that HCN "polymer" is ubiquitous in the solar system. We apply vacuum deposition and spectroscopic techniques previously used on synthetic organic heteropolymers (tholins), kerogens, and meteoritic organic residues to the measurement of the optical constants of poly-HCN in the wavelength range 0.05-40 micrometers. These measurements allow quantitative comparison with spectrophotometry of organic-rich bodies in the outer solar system. In a specific test of Matthews' hypothesis, poly-HCN fails to match the optical constants of the haze of the Saturnian moon, Titan, in the visible and near-infrared derived from astronomical observations and standard models of the Titan atmosphere. In contrast, a tholin produced from a simulated Titan atmosphere matches within the probable errors. Poly-HCN is much more N-rich than Titan tholin.


Subject(s)
Astronomy , Hydrogen Cyanide/analysis , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Polymers/analysis , Polymers/chemistry , Solar System , Astronomical Phenomena , Dimerization , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen Cyanide/isolation & purification , Optics and Photonics , Photolysis , Polymers/chemical synthesis , Polymers/isolation & purification , Refractometry , Saturn , Scattering, Radiation , Spectrophotometry, Infrared , Vacuum
16.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 22(5): 277-85, 1992.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536519

ABSTRACT

Miller and Urey suggested in 1959 that lightning and corona on the early Earth could have been the most favorable sources of prebiotic synthesis. In 1991 Chyba and Sagan reviewed the presently prevailing data on electrical discharges on Earth and they raised questions as to whether the electrical sources of prebiotic synthesis were as favorable as was claimed. The proposal of the present paper is that localized lightning sources associated with Archaean volcanoes could have possessed considerable advantages for prebiotic synthesis over the previously suggested global sources.


Subject(s)
Earth, Planet , Evolution, Chemical , Evolution, Planetary , Lightning , Volcanic Eruptions , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis
17.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 20: 199-231, 1992.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11537523

ABSTRACT

A one-dimensional photochemical model was used to examine the effect of bolide impacts on the oxidation state of Earth's primitive atmosphere. The impact rate should have been high prior to 3.8 Ga before present, based on evidence derived from the Moon. Impacts of comets or carbonaceous asteroids should have enhanced the atmospheric CO/CO2 ratio by bringing in CO ice and/or organic carbon that can be oxidized to CO in the impact plume. Ordinary chondritic impactors would contain elemental iron that could have reacted with ambient CO2 to give CO. Nitric oxide (NO) should also have been produced by reaction between ambient CO2 and N2 in the hot impact plumes. High NO concentrations increase the atmospheric CO/CO2 ratio by increasing the rainout rate of oxidized gases. According to the model, atmospheric CO/CO2 ratios of unity or greater are possible during the first several hundred million years of Earth's history, provided that dissolved CO was not rapidly oxidized to bicarbonate in the ocean. Specifically, high atmospheric CO/CO2 ratios are possible if either: (1) the climate was cool (like today's climate), so that hydration of dissolved CO to formate was slow, or (2) the formate formed from CO was efficiently converted into volatile, reduced carbon compounds, such as methane. A high atmospheric CO/CO2 ratio may have helped to facilitate prebiotic synthesis by enhancing the production rates of hydrogen cyanide and formaldehyde. Formaldehyde may have been produced even more efficiently by photochemical reduction of bicarbonate and formate in Fe(++)-rich surface waters.


Subject(s)
Atmosphere , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Carbon Monoxide/chemistry , Earth, Planet , Models, Chemical , Formaldehyde/chemical synthesis , Formaldehyde/chemistry , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Minor Planets , Nitric Oxide/chemistry , Oceans and Seas , Oxidation-Reduction , Paleontology , Photochemistry , Solar System , Temperature
18.
J Br Interplanet Soc ; 45(1): 43-8, 1992 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11539467

ABSTRACT

Current research in cosmochemistry shows that crude organic solids of high molecular weight are readily formed in planetary, interplanetary and interstellar environments. Underlying much of this ubiquitous chemistry is a low energy route leading directly to the synthesis of hydrogen cyanide and its polymers. Evidence from laboratory and extraterrestrial investigations suggests that these polymers plus water yield heteropolypeptides, a truly universal process that accounts not only for the past synthesis of protein ancestors on Earth but also for reactions proceeding elsewhere today within our solar system, on planetary bodies and satellites around other stars and in the dusty molecular clouds of spiral galaxies. The existence of this preferred pathway - hydrogen cyanide polymerization - surely increases greatly the probability that carbon-based life is widespread in the universe.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Chemical , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemistry , Meteoroids , Origin of Life , Polymers/chemistry , Amino Acids/chemical synthesis , Ammonia/chemistry , Cosmic Dust , Exobiology , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Hydrolysis , Methane/chemistry , Polymers/chemical synthesis , Solar System
19.
Icarus ; 76: 125-34, 1988.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11538665

ABSTRACT

Many hydrocarbon species have been detected in the atmosphere of Titan. It is possible that lightning activity is occurring in the troposphere and that it contributes to the hydrocarbon inventory. Measurements of the chemical yields of hydrogen cyanide, acetylene, ethylene, ethane, and propane from simulated lightning discharges are reported. A comparison of the experimental results with those based on thermodynamic equilibrium assumptions shows significant disagreement and implies that theories based solely on thermodynamic equilibrium are inadequate. Although photochemistry and charged particle chemistry occurring in the stratosphere can account for many of the observed hydrocarbon species, the predicted abundance of ethylene is too low by a factor of 10 to 40. While some ethylene will be produced by charged-particle chemistry, the production of ethylene by lightning and its subsequent diffusion into the stratosphere appears to be an adequate source.


Subject(s)
Hydrocarbons/analysis , Hydrogen Cyanide/analysis , Lightning , Saturn , Atmosphere/chemistry , Chromatography, Gas , Hydrocarbons/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Lasers , Models, Chemical , Photochemistry , Temperature
20.
Nature ; 326: 777-8, 1987 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11540882

ABSTRACT

The formation of HCN and chromophores are two of the major unsolved problems of the atmospheric chemistry of Jupiter. The question to be dealt with is the same in each case: how can these unsaturated organic compounds be formed in the highly reducing atmosphere (89% H2) present on Jupiter? The photolysis of ammonia/acetylene mixtures provides an answer to this question. Here we report the formation of both HCN and chromophores along with experimental data which support the premise that this photochemical process provides a route for the formation of both substances. It is not clear whether significant amounts of HCN are also formed by lightning on Jupiter.


Subject(s)
Atmosphere/chemistry , Color , Extraterrestrial Environment , Hydrogen Cyanide/chemical synthesis , Jupiter , Acetylene/analysis , Acetylene/chemistry , Ammonia/analysis , Ammonia/chemistry , Atmosphere/analysis , Hydrogen Cyanide/analysis , Lightning , Photochemistry , Photolysis
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