首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Alteration of five organic compounds by glow discharge plasma and UV light under simulated Mars conditions
Authors:Paul E Hintze  Charles R Buhler  Luz M Calle
Institution:a Corrosion Technology Laboratory, NASA Kennedy Space Center, FL 32899, United States
b ASRC Aerospace, NASA Kennedy Space Center, FL 32899, United States
c Dept. of Plant Pathology, University of Florida, Space Life Sciences Lab, Kennedy Space Center, FL 32899, United States
d Electrostatics and Surface Physics Laboratory, NASA Kennedy Space Center, FL 32899, United States
Abstract:The Viking missions to Mars failed to detect any organic material in regolith samples. Since then, several removal mechanisms of organic material have been proposed. Two of these proposed methods are removal due to exposure to plasmas created in dust devils and exposure to UV irradiation. The experiments presented here were performed to identify similarities between the two potential removal mechanisms and to identify any compounds produced from these mechanisms that would have been difficult for the Viking instruments to detect. Five organic compounds, phenanthrene, octadecane, octadecanoic acid, decanophenone and benzoic acid, were exposed to a glow discharge plasma created in simulated martian atmospheres as might be present in dust devils, and to UV irradiation similar to that found at the surface of Mars. Glow discharge exposure was carried out in a chamber with 6.9 mbar pressure of a Mars like gas composed mostly of carbon dioxide. The plasma was characterized using emission spectroscopy and found to contain cations and excited neutral species including carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen. UV irradiation experiments were performed in a Mars chamber which simulates the temperature, pressure, atmospheric composition, and UV fluence rates of equatorial Mars. The non-volatile residues left after each exposure were characterized by mass loss, infrared spectroscopy and high resolution mass spectrometry. Oxidized, higher molecular weight versions of the parent compounds containing carbonyl, hydroxyl and alkenyl functional groups were identified. The presence of these oxidized compounds suggests that searches for organic material in soils on Mars use instrumentation suitable for detection of compounds which contain the above functional groups. Discussions of possible reaction mechanisms are given.
Keywords:Mars  Surface  Organic chemistry  Mars  Atmosphere  Spectroscopy
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号