Isomerism: Stereochemistry Flashcards

1
Q

What are isomers

A

Are compounds that have the same chemical formula, but the atoms in the compound are arranged differently
Two isomers will therefore have different properties

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2
Q

What are constitutional isomers

A

Have the same atoms but bond differently (atoms are connected with different atoms)
For example: C₄H₁₀

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2
Q

What are conformational isomers

A

Are those that differ as a result of a C-C bond rotation in alkanes.
For example: C₂H₆

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2
Q

What are Stereoisomers

A

are compounds that have the same atom connectivity but a different arrangement of atoms in space
For example in alkenes this is because there is no rotation around the double bond
And in chiral compounds because they are non-superimposable on another

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2
Q

Stereoisomers can be classified into which to categories

A

Enantiomers and Diasteroisomers:

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3
Q

Enantiomers are…

A

non-superimposable mirror images

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4
Q

Diasteroisomers are…

A

not superimposable but they are not mirror images either

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5
Q

fill in the gaps

A

Do the two molecules have the same constitution?
Can the two molecules be superimposed on one another after rotating about single bonds?
Is one molecule the non-superimposable mirror image of the other?

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6
Q

If something is achiral

A

There is symmetry and the two compounds are superimposable on another

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7
Q

If something is chiral

A

It doesn’t have symmetry and both compounds are non-superimposable

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8
Q

How can chirality related to an organic mechanism

A

The reaction between an aldehyde and cyanide forming a cyanohydrin
The cyanide anion undergoes nucleophillic attack at the carbonyl carbon of the Pi antibonding orbital, which can occur on either side
This can allow two products to form: where the OH groups will alternate either pointing forward or backwards, both are enantiomers

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9
Q

Are C and D identical?

A

C and D are themselves identical, meaning they are achiral
One structure can be superimposed through rotating along a vertical plane

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10
Q

What is a molecules with a stereogenic or chiral centre

A

A carbon atom with 4 different atoms/groups attached
All molecules with one stereogenic centre of chiral

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11
Q

What is a racemic mixture

A

A mixutre of enantiomers in equal proportions (50:50)
A reaction with achiral starting materials and reagents will always produce a racemic mixture (equal attack from both sides of the reactant)

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12
Q

If something is enantiomerically pure it …

A

is a single (pure) enantiomer of a chiral compound
Nature is a major source of enantiomerically pure compounds

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13
Q

What is the CIP system

A

Assigns a letter to each enantiomer (R or S) that describes the configuration of groups at a particu;ar stereogenic (chiral) centre

14
Q

Using the CIP system, assign a letter to the following compound

A

Step 1: Prioritise the 4 groups around a chiral centre according to the atomic number. The highest atomic number is assigned priority 1 and the lowest atmoic number kis assigned priority 4
Step 2: You must orientate the chiral centre such that the lowest priority group is pointing away from the viewer
Step 3: Draw a path from priority 1 - priority 2 - priority 3
If the path is clockwise, the chiral centre is assiged [R]
If the path is anticlockwise, the chiral centre is assiged [S]
Therefore for this compound the absolute configuration is [s]

14
Q

Chiral molecules are optically active meaning

A

they can rotate plane polarised light
Optical rotatation is the extent to which a molecule will rotate plane polaried light - it is measured in degrees and the instrument used is a polarimeter

15
Q

How does a polarimeter work

A
  • The first step is to pass light (sodium lamp) through a polariser, that will only allow wave on one specific vertical plane to pass through the sample
  • If the material is optically active, the plane of polarisation is rotated in either clockwise or anticlockwise direction. The angle of rotation is alpha
16
Q

Why do you use optical rotation to distinguish enantiomers

A

Enantiomers are identical in all physical properties except optical rotation (their boiling points, melting points, IR/NMR and mass spectra are identical)
Each enantiomer is a pair is optically active and rotates the plane polarised light by the same degree but in opposite directions. The angle (α) are equal and opposite

17
Q

During polarisation, enantiomers will rotate either to the left or to the right
How is this shown through nomenclature

A

Rotating plane polarised light to the right = (+)
Rotating plane polarised light to the left = (-)
e.g. (S)-(+)-carvone

18
Q

What can the exact angle of rotation (α) be affected by
How is this standardised

A

The exact value of [α] depends on concentration of sample, path length, temperture and wavelength of light used
To standardised this [α] is in square brakets and the temperature of light (usually sodium D-line) are quotated

18
Q

When a molecule has two or more stereogenic centres, its can have two different types of stereoisomers
For example, how many isomers are possible and how many combinations of R and S are possible for 3-aminobutan-2-ol

A
  • Both the OH and the NH₂ groups can pointing forward arrising an S configuration for both groups
  • Both the OH and the NH₂ groups can face backwards arrising an R configuration for both groups
  • The OH can point forwards (S configuration) and the NH₂ point backwards (R configuration)
  • THe OH can point backwards (R configuration) and the NH₂ point forwards (S configuration)
  • This gives 4 possible isomers
19
Q

If we compare
What can we say about these two isomers of 3-aminobutan-2-ol

A

Both centres are swapped
They are mirror images of another and non-superimposable meaning they are enantiomers

20
Q

If we compare
Two isomers of 3-aminobutan-2-ol

A

Both centres are not swapped, only one centre is swapped (OH group attached) hence we don’t produce mirror images and is not enantiomeric
Instead they are diasteroisomers

21
Q

Comparing enantiomers and diasterisomers
How do melting points and [α] value differ

A

When comparing Enantiomers or Diastereomers they will have very similar melting points and thir [α] values will be a positive and negative or the same value
When comparing Enantiomers and Diastereomers they will have very different melting points and their [α] values will be very different too

22
Q

What is an easy way to work out how many possible isomers a chiral compound will have

A

If there is a compound with n-stereogenic centres, there will be 2n possible isomers
Some of these will be pairs of enantiomers and pairs of diateroisomers

23
Q

What is relative stereochemistry

A

When there are two or more sterogenic centres in a molecule, the position in space of an atom/group in a molecule can be described relative to another atom/group

24
Q

For rings, the notation cis/trans is used
Relative stereochemistry: Which compound is cis and trans

A

Cis = same side, trans = opposite side
Left = cis 4-t-butyl-cyclohexanol
Right = trans 4=t=butyl-cyclohexanol
It depends if the tertiary butyl group and OH group is pointing the the same or different directions

25
Q

For open chains, the notation syn/anti is used
Relative stereochemistry: Which compound is syn and anti

A

Depends on if the bromine groups are pointing in the same direction or different directions
Left = syn
Right = anti

26
Q

What is the resolution of Enantiomers

A

The process of separating enantiomers
Since almost all of the physiochemical properties of each enantiomers are identical, you must temporarily convert them into diasteroisomers (which have different properties) by derivatisation with an enantiomerically pure reagent

27
Q

For example: how could you seperate two chiral alcohols

A

We could react them with a homochiral enantiomerically pure carboxylic acid forming a pair of diasteromeric esters
These could be separated then the ester hydrolysed, to creat the original alcohol product

28
Q

What is Chiral Chromatography and why would you use it

A

To seperate to chiral compounds
The stationary phase of the column is itself made up of a homochiral material
As the two enantiomers pass down through the column, flowing with the mobile phase such as a solvent, the two enantiomers will react differently with the homochiral stationary phase of the chromatography column
One enantiomer will take longer to come out of the column than the other, thus they are separated - creates a temporary disatereomeric interaction

29
Q

What are double bond isomers

A

Because there is no rotation about the double bond, two alkenes may have the same bonds but different arrangement
This makes them diasteroisomers as they are not superimposable and not mirror images

30
Q

Using the CIP rules, explain how you could allocate either E or Z to a pair of alkenes

A

Step 1: Select one of the carbon atoms of the double bond and assign priorities for the groups/atoms attached using atomic number
Step 2: If the two atoms directly attached to the double bind carbon are the same, move along to the next atom till you find a difference
Step 3: Of the substituents contain a double/triple bond, treat them as through they are linked to 2 or 3 bonded atoms