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Creators/Authors contains: "Marks, Joshua H"

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  1. Abstract Oxygen-containing complex organic molecules are key precursors to biorelevant compounds fundamental for the origins of life. However, the untangling of their interstellar formation mechanisms has just scratched the surface, especially for oxygen-containing cyclic molecules. Here, we present the first laboratory simulation experiments featuring the formation of all three C2H4O isomers—ethylene oxide (c–C2H4O), acetaldehyde (CH3CHO), and vinyl alcohol (CH2CHOH)—in low-temperature model interstellar ices composed of carbon monoxide (CO) and ethanol (C2H5OH). Ice mixtures were exposed to galactic cosmic-ray proxies with an irradiation dose equivalent to a cold molecular cloud aged (7 ± 2) × 105yr. These biorelevant species were detected in the gas phase through isomer-selective photoionization reflectron time-of-flight mass spectrometry during temperature-programmed desorption. Isotopic labeling experiments reveal that ethylene oxide is produced from ethanol alone, providing the first experimental evidence to support the hypothesis that ethanol serves as a precursor to the prototype epoxide in interstellar ices. These findings reveal feasible pathways for the formation of all three C2H4O isomers in ethanol-rich interstellar ices, offering valuable constraints on astrochemical models for their formation. Our results suggest that ethanol is a critical precursor to C2H4O isomers in interstellar environments, representing a critical step toward unraveling the formation mechanisms of oxygen-containing cyclic molecules, aldehydes, and their enol tautomers from alcohols in interstellar ices. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 6, 2026
  2. Laskin, Julia (Ed.)
    Laser desorption mass spectrometry was employed to study rubrene using three different sample preparation methods. Pressed-pellet and films drop-cast from solution were investigated with a laser-desorption time-of-flight spectrometer. Jet-cooled rubrene cations were produced in a supersonic molecular beam by laser desorption from a film-coated metal rod and detected with time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The films for this process were produced by vacuum sublimation of powder samples. The mass spectra from each of these samples contained the parent molecular ion and fragments resulting from phenyl ring elimination - a pattern similar to that produced by electron impact ionization. The amount of fragmentation varied with sample preparation and desorption laser wavelength. The rubrene cation was mass selected and studied with UV laser photodissociation at 355 nm. The resulting fragmentation mass spectrum indicated the loss of one or two phenyl groups, but no more than this. Computational studies of the ion energetics were used to investigate the stable fragment ion structures and understand the energetics of the dissociation process. 
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  3. Glyceric acid [HOCH2CH(OH)COOH]—the simplest sugar acid—represents a key molecule in biochemical processes vital for metabolism in living organisms such as glycolysis. Although critically linked to the origins of life and identified in carbonaceous meteorites with abundances comparable to amino acids, the underlying mechanisms of its formation have remained elusive. Here, we report the very first abiotic synthesis of racemic glyceric acid via the barrierless radical-radical reaction of the hydroxycarbonyl radical (HOĊO) with 1,2-dihydroxyethyl (HOĊHCH2OH) radical in low-temperature carbon dioxide (CO2) and ethylene glycol (HOCH2CH2OH) ices. Using isomer-selective vacuum ultraviolet photoionization reflectron time-of-flight mass spectrometry, glyceric acid was identified in the gas phase based on the adiabatic ionization energies and isotopic substitution studies. This work reveals the key reaction pathways for glyceric acid synthesis through nonequilibrium reactions from ubiquitous precursor molecules, advancing our fundamental knowledge of the formation pathways of key biorelevant organics—sugar acids—in deep space. 
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  4. Astronomically elusive propen-2-ol and methyl vinyl ether were prepared in irradiated low-temperature acetone ices and detected in the gas phase via photoionization. 
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  5. Although methanediamine (CH 2 (NH 2 ) 2 ) has historically been the subject of theoretical scrutiny, it has never been isolated to date. Here, we report the preparation of methanediamine (CH 2 (NH 2 ) 2 )—the simplest diamine. Low-temperature interstellar analog ices composed of ammonia and methylamine were exposed to energetic electrons which act as proxies for secondary electrons produced in the track of galactic cosmic rays. These experimental conditions, which simulate the conditions within cold molecular clouds, result in radical formation and initiate aminomethyl (ĊH 2 NH 2 ) and amino ( N . H 2 ) radical chemistry. Exploiting tunable photoionization reflectron time-of-flight mass spectrometry (PI-ReToF-MS) to make isomer-specific assignments, methanediamine was identified in the gas phase upon sublimation, while its isomer methylhydrazine (CH 3 NHNH 2 ) was not observed. The molecular formula was confirmed to be CH 6 N 2 through the use of isotopically labeled reactants. Methanediamine is the simplest molecule to contain the NCN moiety and could be a vital intermediate in the abiotic formation of heterocyclic and aromatic systems such as nucleobases, which all contain the NCN moiety. 
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  6. Oxirene was prepared and stabilized in matrices through resonant energy transfer prior to identification in the gas phase. 
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