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Revealing SO and CO adsorption features on forsterite IR spectroscopy and automated computational approaches. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

The interaction between interstellar molecules and silicate dust plays a critical role in the chemical evolution of interstellar and circumstellar environments. In this work, we combine infrared (IR) spectroscopy with automated density functional theory (DFT) calculations to investigate the adsorption and vibrational signatures of CO and SO on forsterite surfaces. Experimental IR spectra collected under cryogenic conditions reveal coverage- and temperature-dependent features that evolve from physisorbed to chemisorbed regimes. To interpret these observations, we construct theoretical spectra from a large ensemble of adsorption configurations across multiple surface terminations, weighted by their Boltzmann distributions at 100 K and by a per-surface abundance factor. The resulting spectra reproduce key experimental features, enabling the identification of binding trends. For CO, we predict the transition from weakly bound species to carbonate-like modes at lower frequencies. For SO, our simulations identify the dominant bands due to bidentate and tridentate chemisorption. This integrative approach highlights the importance of surface morphology and thermodynamic weighting in reconciling theory and experiments providing a framework for the spectroscopic analysis of molecular adsorption on interstellar dust analogs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12147705PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d5cp01699aDOI Listing

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