CHM136H1 Chapter Notes - Chapter 5.1: Enantiomer, Stereochemistry

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12 Mar 2018
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CHM136H1 Full Course Notes
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Handedness is also important in organic and biological chemistry, where it arises primarily as a consequence of the tetrahedral stereochemistry of sp3-hybridized carbon atoms. Many drugs and almost all the molecules in our bodies amino acids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids, and many more have a handedness. Furthermore, molecular handedness enables the precise interactions between enzymes and their substrates that are involved in the hundreds of thousands of chemical reactions on which life is based. In the image below, the ch3x and ch2xy molecules are identical to their mirror images and thus are not handed. If a molecular model of the molecule and its mirror image is made, they would superimpose on to one another so that all atoms coincide. Molecules that are not identical o their mirror images are a kind of stereoisomer called enantiomers: one need not be h. For example, lactic acid (2-hydroxypropanoic acid) exists as a.

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