CHE 211 Study Guide - Final Guide: Polarimeter, Glyceraldehyde, Stereochemistry

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8 May 2018
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Organic Chemistry 2: Carbohydrates
Fischer’s Projections
The Relationship Between Molecular Structure and Optical Activity
Glyceraldehyde has one stereogenic carbon atom located at C2 and can exist in 2
enantiomeric forms (R and S or D- and L-)
The R and S notation indicates the absolute configuration about the chiral center
according to Khan, Ingol, Prelude rules for assigning stereochemistry
The + ad - otatio idiates the diretio i hih the oleule rotates plae
polarized light
When an enantiomer in a solution is placed in the polarimeter, the plane of rotation of
the polarized light is rotated
One enantiomer always rotates light in a clockwise (+) direction (this is the
dextrorotatory isomer)
The other isomer rotates the light in a counter-clockwise (-) direction (this is the
levorotatory isomer)
The notations R & S, D- & L- and + & -, these are UNRELATED!! This eas that the ‘
enantiomer will not always rotate plane polarized light to the right or in a clockwise
fashion
Absolute configurations R and S, can be determined by looking the molecule, just like for
D- and L-, but the specific rotation of the molecule must be determined
EXPERIMENTALLY
Under identical conditions, the enantiomers always rotate light to exactly the same
degree, but in opposite directions
Fischer was also responsible for introducing stereochemical nomenclature that
preceded the R/S system and this method is still used today for sugars and amino acids
He used a sall apital D to represet the ofiguration of the plus
glyceraldehyde that has the hydroxyl group located on the last carbon atom
(before CH2OH group) on the right the enantiomer of this would have the -OH
group to the left ad this ould e represeted y L
D = dextrorotatory (this is the one that occurs naturally)
L = levorotatory
Fischer Projection Formulas
o A Fischer project uses lines crossing through the chiral carbon to represent bonds this
is used to represent stereochemistry at the chiral centers of the carbohydrates
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Document Summary

This (cid:373)ea(cid:374)s that the (cid:858) (cid:859) enantiomer will not always rotate plane polarized light to the right or in a clockwise fashion: absolute configurations r and s, can be determined by looking the molecule, just like for. D- and l-, but the specific rotation of the molecule must be determined. D = dextrorotatory (this is the one that occurs naturally) Monosaccharides are drawn in fischer projections and they have the same r/s configuration at the chiral center as d- All of these natural occurring monosaccharides, they all have the hydroxyl group at the bottom chiral center pointing towards the right these compounds are referred to as the d-sugars. With the most oxidized carbon closest to the top. The carbons are numbered from the top. If the chiral carbon with the highest number has the oh to the right, the sugar is d; it (cid:449)ill ha(cid:448)e a (cid:862) (cid:863) (cid:272)o(cid:374)figuratio(cid:374)

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