CHM242H5 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Atomic Number, Specific Rotation, Optical Rotation

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Chirality: chiral: molecules that do not have a plane of symmetry and are not superimposable on their mirror image, achiral: molecules with a plane of symmetry that is the same as its mirror image. Chirality center: point in a molecule where 4 different groups are attached to carbon, most common cause of chirality. For a carbon part of a ring: each direction you can go through the ring from the carbon is a different group: h, ch3, c=o, c, c, c, c, c, c, c, c, c=o. So every group is different, thus there is a chirality center denoted by a * Chiral molecules can rotate plane-polarized light: optically active: property of organic compounds to rotate plane-polarized light that passes through it. Specific rotation: levorotary (-): if compound rotates light in counter clockwise direction, dextrorotatory (+): if compound rotates light in clockwise direction.

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