CHMB41H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 16: Threonine, Stereoisomerism, Polarimeter

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Chiral molecules can be called optically active because they have a property that allows them to actively rotate plane-polarized light. It allows just one plane of light to pass through and everything else gets locked. Allow is a beam of light passing through the sample. Some molecules can rotate in the clockwise direction and they can be called dextrorotatory or d or + The molecules that rotate this light in counter clockwise direction they will be called levorotatory or l or . This has nothing to do with the r and s configuration. You put in the observed rotation from the machine. You put in c the concentration of the sample. You put in l the length of the sample holder. This would give you a value called specific rotation. It depends on d source of light and it depends on temperature meaning changing temperature can change the observed temperature.

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