CHEM 261 Lecture Notes - Lecture 13: Jean-Baptiste Biot, Absolute Configuration, Specific Rotation

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Enantiomers need a carbon with 4 different substituents: you can only have a chiral molecule if a carbon is quaternary with four different substituents. If four different groups (or atoms) are attached to a tetrahedral atom, it is called a chiral center. If any two groups are the same, then that atom is not a chiral center (achiral atom) and will not give enantiomerism: a chiral molecule usually has at least one chirality center. Chirality in chiral molecules: cyclohexane: groups are different if there is any non-conformational structural difference (if groups cannot not be superimposed if detached, they are different) In cyclic molecules, we compare by following along each direction. Chirality in disubstituted cyclohexane: the key is symmetry. Specific rotation and molecules: specific rotation is characteristic of a molecule, specific rotation of enantiomers is equal in magnitude but opposite in sign, optical activity can be measured, chirality can be determined.

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