Chemistry 2213A/B Chapter 6: 6.1-6.10 Chirality The Handedness of Molecules

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Stereoisomers: isomers that have the same molecular formula and the same connectivity, but different orientations of their atoms in space. Enantiomers: stereoisomers that are nonsuperposable mirror images; the term refers to a relationship between pairs of objects. Significance: except for inorganic and few simple organic compounds, Significance: except for inorganic and few simple organic compounds, most organic compounds show this type of isomerism. Most common cause of enantiomerism: carbon bonded to 4 different groups. Imagine picking up mirror image and moving i around. Superimposable: if the mirror image can be picked up and matched perfectly to the original. They represent the same molecule; oriented differently in space. Nonsuperposable: no matter how you turn the mirror image, it will not fit exactly on the original with every detail matching. Try to rotate molecules to make them superposable, if not they are different compounds. Chiral: meaning hand; objects that are not superposable on their mirror images.

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