Diazenylium

Diazenylium is the chemical N2H+, an inorganic cation that was one of the first ions to be observed in interstellar clouds. Since then, it has been observed for in several different types of interstellar environments, observations that have several different scientific uses. It gives astronomers information about the fractional ionization of gas clouds, the chemistry that happens within those clouds, and it is often used as a tracer for molecules that are not as easily detected (such as N2).[1] Its 1–0 rotational transition occurs at 93.174 GHz, a region of the spectrum where Earth's atmosphere is transparent[2] and it has a significant optical depth in both cold and warm clouds[3] so it is relatively easy to observe with ground-based observatories. The results of N2H+ observations can be used not only for determining the chemistry of interstellar clouds, but also for mapping the density and velocity profiles of these clouds.[4]

Astronomical detections

N2H+ was first observed in 1974 by B.E. Turner. He observed a previously unidentified triplet at 93.174 GHz using the NRAO 11 m telescope.[5] Immediately after this initial observation, Green et al. identified the triplet as the 1–0 rotational transition of N2H+. This was done using a combination of ab initio molecular calculations and comparison of similar molecules, such as N2, CO, HCN, HNC, and HCO+, which are all isoelectronic to N2H+. Based on these calculations, the observed rotational transition would be expected to have seven hyperfine components, but only three of these were observed, since the telescope's resolution was insufficient to distinguish the peaks caused by the hyperfine splitting of the inner Nitrogen atom.[6] Just a year later, Thaddeus and Turner observed the same transition in the Orion molecular cloud 2 (OMC-2) using the same telescope, but this time they integrated for 26 hours, which resulted in a resolution that was good enough to distinguish the smaller hyperfine components.[7]

Over the past three decades, N2H+ has been observed quite frequently, and the 1–0 rotational band is almost exclusively the one that astronomers look for. In 1995, the hyperfine structure of this septuplet was observed with an absolute precision of ~7 kHz, which was good enough to determine its molecular constants with an order of magnitude better precision than was possible in the laboratory.[8] This observation was done toward L1512 using the 37 m NEROC Haystack Telescope. In the same year, Sage et al. observed the 1–0 transition of N2H+ in seven out of the nine nearby galaxies that they observed with the NRAO 12 m telescope at Kitt Peak.[9] N2H+ was one of the first few molecular ions to be observed in other galaxies, and its observation helped to show that the chemistry in other galaxies is quite similar to that which we see in our own galaxy.

N2H+ is most often observed in dense molecular clouds, where it has proven useful as one of the last molecules to freeze out onto dust grains as the density of the cloud increases toward the center. In 2002, Bergin et al. did a spatial survey of dense cores to see just how far toward the center N2H+ could be observed and found that its abundance drops by at least two orders of magnitude when one moves from the outer edge of the core to the center. This showed that even N2H+ is not an ideal tracer for the chemistry of dense pre-stellar cores, and concluded that H2D+ may be the only good molecular probe of the innermost regions of pre-stellar cores.[10]

Laboratory detections

Although N2H+ is most often observed by astronomers because of its ease of detection, there have been some laboratory experiments that have observed it in a more controlled environment. The first laboratory spectrum of N2H+ was of the 1–0 rotational band in the ground vibrational level, the same microwave transition that astronomers had recently discovered in space.[11]

Ten years later, Owrutsky et al. performed vibrational spectroscopy of N2H+ by observing the plasma created by a discharge of a mixture nitrogen, hydrogen, and argon gas using a color center laser. During the pulsed discharge, the poles were reversed on alternating pulses, so the ions were pulled back and forth through the discharge cell. This caused the absorption features of the ions, but not the neutral molecules, to be shifted back and forth in frequency space, so a lock-in amplifier could be used to observe the spectra of just the ions in the discharge. The lock-in combined with the velocity modulation gave >99.9% discrimination between ions and neutrals. The feed gas was optimized for N2H+ production, and transitions up to J = 41 were observed for both the fundamental N–H stretching band and the bending hot band.[12]

Later, Kabbadj et al. observed even more hot bands associated with the fundamental vibrational band using a difference frequency laser to observe a discharge of a mixture of nitrogen, hydrogen, and helium gases. They used velocity modulation in the same way that Owrutsky et al. had, in order to discriminate ions from neutrals. They combined this with a counterpropogating beam technique to aid in noise subtraction, and this greatly increased their sensitivity. They had enough sensitivity to observe OH+, H2O+, and H3O+ that were formed from the minute O2 and H2O impurities in their helium tank.[13]

By fitting all observed bands, the rotational constants for N2H+ were determined to be Be = 1.561928 cm−1 and De = 2.746×10−6 cm−1, which are the only constants needed to determine the rotational spectrum of this linear molecule in the ground vibrational state, with the exception of determining hyperfine splitting. Given the selection rule ΔJ = ±1, the calculated rotational energy levels, along with their percent population at 30 kelvins, can be plotted. The frequencies of the peaks predicted by this method differ from those observed in the laboratory by at most 700 kHz.

Chemistry

N2H+ is found mostly in dense molecular clouds, where its presence is closely related to that of many other nitrogen-containing compounds.[14] It is particularly closely tied to the chemistry of N2, which is more difficult to detect (since it lacks a dipole moment). This is why N2H+ is commonly used to indirectly determine the abundance of N2 in molecular clouds.

The rates of the dominant formation and destruction reactions can be determined from known rate constants and fractional abundances (relative to H2) in a typical dense molecular cloud.[15] The calculated rates here were for early time (316,000 years) and a temperature of 20 kelvins, which are typical conditions for a relatively young molecular cloud.

Production of diazenylium
Reaction Rate constant Rate/[H2]2 Relative rate
H2 + N+
2
→ N2H+ + H
2.0×10−91.7×10−231.0
H+
3
+ N2 → N2H+ + H2
1.8×10−91.5×10−229.1
Destruction of diazenylium
Reaction Rate constant Rate/[H2]2 Relative rate
N2H+ + O → N2 + OH+ 1.4×10−101.6×10−231.0
N2H+ + CO → N2 + HCO+ 1.4×10−105.0×10−233.2
N2H+ + e → N2 + H 2.0×10−64.4×10−232.8
N2H+ + e → NHN 2.6×10−65.7×10−233.7

There are dozens more reactions possible, but these are the only ones that are fast enough to affect the abundance of N2H+ in dense molecular clouds. Diazenylium thus plays a critical role in the chemistry of many nitrogen-containing molecules.[14] Although the actual electron density in so-called "dense clouds" is quite low, the destruction of N2H+ is governed mostly by dissociative recombination.

References

  1. "P. Caselli, P.C. Myers, and P. Thaddeus, ApJL, 455: L77 (1995)". Archived from the original on 2014-07-06. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  2. "CSO Atmospheric Transmission Interactive Plotter". Archived from the original on 2008-09-18. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  3. L. Pirogov, I. Zinchenko, P. Caselli, L.E.B. Johansson and P. C. Myers, A&A, 405: 639-654 (2003)
  4. Caselli, Paola; Benson, Priscilla J.; Myers, Philip C.; Tafalla, Mario (2002). "Dense Cores in Dark Clouds. XIV. N2H+ (1–0) Maps of Dense Cloud Cores". The Astrophysical Journal. 572 (1): 238–63. arXiv:astro-ph/0202173. Bibcode:2002ApJ...572..238C. doi:10.1086/340195. ISSN 0004-637X.
  5. B. Turner, ApJ, 193: L83 (1974)
  6. S. Green, J. Montgomery, and P. Thaddeus, ApJ, 193: L89 (1974)
  7. P. Thaddeus and B.E. Turner, ApJ, 201: L25-L26 (1975)
  8. "P. Caselli, P. Myers, and P. Thaddeus, ApJL, 455: L77 (1995)". Archived from the original on 2014-07-06. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
  9. L. Sage and L. Ziurys, ApJ, 447: 625 (1995)
  10. Bergin, Edwin A.; Alves, João; Huard, Tracy; Lada, Charles J. (2002). "N2H+ and C18O Depletion in a Cold Dark Cloud". The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 570 (2): L101–L104. arXiv:astro-ph/0204016. Bibcode:2002ApJ...570L.101B. doi:10.1086/340950. ISSN 1538-4357.
  11. R. Saykally, T. Dixon, T. Anderson, P. Szanto, and R. Woods, ApJ, 205: L101 (1976)
  12. J. Owrutsky, C. Gudeman, C. Martner, L. Tack, N. Rosenbaum, and R. Saykally, JCP, 84: 605 (1986)
  13. Kabbadj, Y; Huet, T.R; Rehfuss, B.D; Gabrys, C.M; Oka, T (1994), "Infrared Spectroscopy of Highly Excited Vibrational Levels of Protonated Nitrogen, HN+2", Journal of Molecular Spectroscopy, 163 (1): 180–205, Bibcode:1994JMoSp.163..180K, doi:10.1006/jmsp.1994.1016
  14. "S. Prasad and W. Huntress, ApJS, 43: 1-35 (1980)". Archived from the original on 2014-07-06. Retrieved 2008-12-16.
  15. T. Millar, P. Farquhar, and K. Willacy, A\&A Supp, 121: 139 (1997)
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