BackStereochemistry: Chiral Molecules (Chapter 5 Study Notes)
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Stereochemistry: Chiral Molecules
Introduction to Isomerism
Stereochemistry is the study of the spatial arrangement of atoms in molecules and its impact on their chemical properties. Isomerism describes compounds with the same molecular formula but different structures or arrangements.
Isomers: Compounds with the same molecular formula but different structures.
Constitutional Isomers: Isomers with different bond connectivities.
Stereoisomers: Isomers with the same connectivity but different spatial arrangements.
Subdivision of Isomers
Type | Description |
|---|---|
Constitutional Isomers | Different connectivity of atoms |
Stereoisomers | Same connectivity, different arrangement in space |
Enantiomers | Nonsuperposable mirror images |
Diastereomers | Not mirror images of each other |
Constitutional Isomers
Constitutional isomers have the same molecular formula but differ in the connectivity of their atoms. This leads to distinct physical and chemical properties.
Key Point: Constitutional isomers always have different properties.
Example:
Formula
Constitutional Isomers
C3H8O
CH3CH2CH2OH, CH3CH(OH)CH3
C4H10
CH3CH2CH2CH3, CH3CH(CH3)CH3
Chiral and Achiral Molecules
Chirality is a property of a molecule that is not superimposable on its mirror image. Achiral molecules are superimposable on their mirror images.
Chiral Objects: Like left and right hands, which are mirror images but not superimposable.
Achiral Objects: Like socks, which are identical to their mirror images and superimposable.
Key Point: A molecule (or object) that is not superimposable on its mirror image is said to be chiral. If it is superimposable, it is achiral.
Examples of Chirality and Achirality
H2O: Achiral, as its mirror image is superimposable.
CH2BrCl: Achiral, as its mirror image is superimposable after rotation.
Hands: Chiral, as left and right hands are not superimposable.
Socks: Achiral, as a sock and its mirror image are identical.
Key Terms and Concepts
Chiral Center (Stereogenic Center): A carbon atom bonded to four different groups, leading to chirality.
Enantiomers: Stereoisomers that are nonsuperposable mirror images of each other.
Diastereomers: Stereoisomers that are not mirror images of each other.
Applications and Importance
Chirality is crucial in biological systems, as many biomolecules and drugs are chiral, and their activity depends on their spatial arrangement.
Understanding isomerism helps in predicting physical and chemical properties, reactivity, and biological activity of organic compounds.
Additional info: The notes above are expanded and clarified for academic completeness, including definitions and examples inferred from context.