CHM1022 Lecture 4: Week 4 Introduction to Stereochemistry

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Molecules that are non-superimposable mirror images of one another are said to the chiral. Chirality is a property found in dna, proteins, sugars to name a few molecular species. A compound or object which is superimposable on its mirror image is referred to as achiral. Achiral molecules have a plane of symmetry asymmetric carbon centre or as a stereogenic centre chiral carbon. In order for a carbon to be achiral, the carbon must bear two identical substituents in order for the mirror image of itself to be superimposable. Diastereoisomers are stereoisomers which are not enantiomers (not mirror images of each other). Diastereoisomer pairs in this case are: (a) and (c), (a) and (d), (b) and (c) and (b) and (d). The absolute configuration (r/s) is denoted in the following way using (a) as an example (2r, 3r)- 2,3,4-trihydroxybutanal meaning the configuration at carbon 2 is r and r at carbon 3. Two of these are enantiomers, (a) and (b).

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