3.7 Optical isomerism Flashcards
What property must a carbon atom have for the molecule to display optical isomerism about that carbon atom
Chiral carbon
4 different substituents attached to one carbon atom
What are the similarities and differences between 2 optical isomers
Same atoms and bonds, non superimposable mirror images of one another. Not identical in chemical properties necessarily
Differ in the way they rotate plane polarised light - rotate plane of polarisation by the same angle but in different directions
What word is used to describe optically active isomers
Chiral
What are pairs of isomers called
Enantiomers
What is the chiral centre
The carbon that has 4 different substituents attached to it
How is the chiral centre denoted
C* (star on C)
Give 2 examples of chiral molecules
All alpha amino acids, except glycine
Lactic acid
How is light polarised
By passing it through a polaroid filter, so oscillations are only in one plane
What effect does the racemic mixture have on plane polarised light
None, as the rotation by each enantiomer cancels out to nothing
What effect does the + isomer have on plane polarised light
Rotates plane of polarisation by x0 clockwise
What effect does the - isomer have on plane polarised light
Rotates plane of polarisation by x0 anticlockwise (same angle, opposite direction)
What is the structure of a polarimeter
Light source (unpolarised light) –> polarising filter (polarised light) –> polarised light passes through compartment containing sample –> detector determines the angle of rotation of the plane polarised light
What are polarimeters used for
To identify which enantiomer is present, the purity of the sample, the conc of the sample etc
What is the first stage synthesis of lactic acid (2-hydroxypropanoic acid) from ethanal (equation)
(reagents are KCN and HCl but it is acceptable to write HCN in the balanced equation as this is the H+ from HCl and -CN from KCN)
CH3CHO + HCN –> CH3CH(OH)CN
Why is the CH3CH(OH)CN molecule formed chiral
H, CH3, OH and CN groups attached to the central chiral carbon atom