Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
H₂CO is a small organic molecule widely detected in protoplanetary disks. As a precursor to grain-surface formation of CH₃OH, H₂CO is considered an important precursor of O-bearing organic molecules that are locked in ices. Still, since gas-phase reactions can also form H₂CO, there remains an open question on the channels by which organics form in disks, and how much the grain versus the gas pathways impact the overall organic reservoir. We present spectrally and spatially resolved Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations of several ortho- and para-H₂CO transitions toward the bright protoplanetary disk around the Herbig Ae star HD 163296. We derive column density, excitation temperature, and ortho-to-para ratio (OPR) radial profiles for H₂CO, as well as disk-averaged values of Nₓ4 10^12 cm^-2, T₄ₗ20 K, and OPR2. 7, respectively. We empirically determine the vertical structure of the emission, finding vertical heights of z/r0. 1. From the profiles, we find a relatively constant OPR2. 7 with radius, but still consistent with 3. 0 among the uncertainties, a secondary increase of Nₓ in the outer disk, and low T₄ₗ values that decrease with disk radius. Our resulting radial, vertical, and OPR constraints suggest an increased UV penetration beyond the dust millimeter edge, consistent with an icy origin but also with cold gas-phase chemistry. This Herbig disk contrasts previous results for the T Tauri disk, TW Hya, which had a larger contribution from cold gas-phase chemistry. More observations of other sources are needed to disentangle the dominant formation pathway of H₂CO in protoplanetary disks.
Hernández-Vera et al. (Tue,) studied this question.