Evidence for Phenylium Reactivity under Interstellar Relevant Conditions
Abstract
Recent work by Kocheril et al.kocheril2025 claimed that phenylium--the cyclic structure of the C6H5+ species--is unreactive toward key interstellar molecules such as molecular hydrogen (H2) and acetylene (C2H2). This finding challenges the previously proposed role of phenylium as a cornerstone in the formation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) cherchneff1992,byrne2024. The study focused on the reactivity of C6H5+, formed via the radiative association between C4H3+ and C2H2, believed to be a major pathway for phenylium formation in astrochemical model, e.g. byrne2024. Here, we present new experimental and theoretical evidence that challenges this assumption. Our results demonstrate that phenylium does indeed react with C2H2 under astrophysically relevant conditions. Quantum chemical calculations support this finding by revealing a barrierless mechanism, indicating that the reaction is feasible even in cold interstellar environments. We believe this clarification is critically important, and that further investigations into the formation of the first aromatic ring in space--a process that remains a key bottleneck in our understanding of PAHs formation and growth--is essential.
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