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Gamma radiation converts methane into complex organic molecules and could explain the origin of life

Gamma radiation converts methane into complex organic molecules and could be the origin of life
Credit: Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2024). DOI: 10.1002/anie.202413296

Gamma radiation can convert methane into a wide variety of products at room temperature, including hydrocarbons, oxygen-containing molecules, and amino acids, according to a new article in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

This type of reaction probably plays an important role in the formation of complex organic in the universe鈥攁nd possibly in the origin of life. It also opens up new strategies for the industrial conversion of methane into high value-added products under mild conditions.

With these research results, the team led by Weixin Huang at the University of Science and Technology of China (Hefei) has contributed to our fundamental understanding of the early development of molecules in the universe.

"Gamma rays, high-energy photons commonly existing in and unstable isotope decay, provide external energy to drive chemical reactions of simple molecules in the icy mantles of interstellar dust and ice grains," states Huang. "This can result in more complex organic molecules, presumably starting from methane (CH4), which is widely present throughout the ."

Although higher pressures and temperatures reign on Earth and on planets in the so-called habitable zone, most studies of cosmic processes are only simulated under vacuum and at extremely low temperatures. In contrast, the Chinese team studied the reactions of methane at room temperature in the gas and aqueous phases under irradiation with a cobalt-60 emitter.

The composition of the products varies depending on the starting materials. Pure methane reacts鈥攚ith very low yield鈥攖o give ethane, propane and hydrogen. The addition of oxygen increases the conversion, resulting mainly in CO2 as well as CO, ethylene, and water.

In the presence of water, aqueous methane reacts to give acetone and tertiary butyl alcohol; in the gas phase, it gives ethane and propane. When both water and oxygen are added, the reactions are strongly accelerated. In the aqueous phase, formaldehyde, acetic acid, and acetone are formed. If ammonia is also added, acetic acid forms glycine, an amino acid also found in space.

"Under gamma radiation, glycine can be made from methane, oxygen, water, and ammonia, molecules that are found in large amounts in space," says Huang. The team developed a reaction scheme that explains the routes by which the individual products are formed. Oxygen (鈭橭2) and 鈭橭H radicals play an important role in this. The rates of these radical reaction mechanisms are not temperature-dependent and could thus also take place in space.

In addition, the team was able to demonstrate that various solid particles that are components of interstellar dust鈥, , magnesium silicate, and graphene oxide鈥攃hange the product selectivity in different ways. The varied composition of interstellar dust may thus have contributed to the observed uneven distribution of molecules in space.

Silicon dioxide leads to a more selective conversion of methane to . Huang says, "Because is an easily available, safe, and sustainable source of energy, this could be a new approach for using as a that can be efficiently converted into value-added products under mild conditions鈥攁 long-standing challenge for industrial synthetic chemistry."

More information: Fei Fang et al, 纬鈥怰ay Driven Aqueous鈥怭hase Methane Conversions into Complex Molecules up to Glycine, Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2024).

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Citation: Gamma radiation converts methane into complex organic molecules and could explain the origin of life (2024, November 6) retrieved 6 June 2025 from /news/2024-11-gamma-methane-complex-molecules-life.html
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