期刊论文详细信息
Life
Fluorine-Rich Planetary Environments as Possible Habitats for Life
Nediljko Budisa1  Vladimir Kubyshkin1 
[1] Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Berlin, Müller-Breslau-Straße 10, 10623 Berlin, Germany; E-Mail:
关键词: fluorine;    habitability;    life;    planetary body;    atmosphere;    solvent;    organic synthesis;    organic chemistry;    alternative biochemistry;   
DOI  :  10.3390/life4030374
来源: mdpi
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【 摘 要 】

In polar aprotic organic solvents, fluorine might be an element of choice for life that uses selected fluorinated building blocks as monomers of choice for self-assembling of its catalytic polymers. Organofluorine compounds are extremely rare in the chemistry of life as we know it. Biomolecules, when fluorinated such as peptides or proteins, exhibit a “fluorous effect”, i.e., they are fluorophilic (neither hydrophilic nor lipophilic). Such polymers, capable of creating self-sorting assemblies, resist denaturation by organic solvents by exclusion of fluorocarbon side chains from the organic phase. Fluorous cores consist of a compact interior, which is shielded from the surrounding solvent. Thus, we can anticipate that fluorine-containing “teflon”-like or “non-sticking” building blocks might be monomers of choice for the synthesis of organized polymeric structures in fluorine-rich planetary environments. Although no fluorine-rich planetary environment is known, theoretical considerations might help us to define chemistries that might support life in such environments. For example, one scenario is that all molecular oxygen may be used up by oxidation reactions on a planetary surface and fluorine gas could be released from F-rich magma later in the history of a planetary body to result in a fluorine-rich planetary environment.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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