Properties of Chiral Molecules: Optical Activity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 70
About This Presentation
Title:

Properties of Chiral Molecules: Optical Activity

Description:

activity, it must be chiral and one enantiomer. must be present in excess of the other. ... or (S) to each chiral carbon. Enantiomers have opposite ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:168
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 71
Provided by: CCN84
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Properties of Chiral Molecules: Optical Activity


1
Properties of Chiral MoleculesOptical Activity
2
Biological Discrimination
gt
3
Optical Activity
  • A substance is optically active if it rotates
    the plane of polarized light.
  • In order for a substance to exhibit
    opticalactivity, it must be chiral and one
    enantiomer must be present in excess of the
    other.

4
Light
  • optical activity is usually measured using light
    having a wavelength of 589 nm
  • this is the wavelength of the yellow light from
    a sodium lamp and is called the D line of sodium

5
Polarized light
  • ordinary (nonpolarized) light consists of
    many beams vibrating in different planes
  • plane-polarized light consists of only those
    beams that vibrate in the same plane

6
Polarization of light
7
Rotation of plane-polarized light
8
Rotation of plane-polarized light
9
Polarimetry
  • Use monochromatic light, usually sodium D
  • Movable polarizing filter to measure angle
  • Enantiomers rotate light in opposite directions,
    but same number of degrees.
  • Clockwise dextrorotatory d or ()
  • Counterclockwise levorotatory l or (-)
  • Not related to (R) and (S)



10
Specific rotation
  • observed rotation (a) depends on the number of
    molecules encountered and is proportional
    to path length (l), and concentration (c)
  • therefore, define specific rotation a as

11
Calculate ?D
  • A 1.00-g sample is dissolved in 20.0 mL ethanol.
    5.00 mL of this solution is placed in a 20.0-cm
    polarimeter tube at 25?C. The observed rotation
    is 1.25? counterclockwise.
    gt

12
Racemic Products
  • If optically inactive reagents combine to form a
    chiral molecule, a racemic mixture of enantiomers
    is formed.

gt
13
a sample that is optically inactive can beeither
an achiral substance or a racemicmixture
14
(No Transcript)
15
Optical Purity
  • Also called enantiomeric excess (ee).
  • Amount of pure enantiomer in excess of the
    racemic mixture.
  • If o.p. 50, then the observed rotation will be
    only 50 of the rotation of the pure enantiomer.
  • Mixture composition would be 75-25.
    gt

16
Calculate Composition
The specific rotation of (S)-2-iodobutane is
15.90?. Determine the composition of a
mixture of (R)- and (S)-2-iodobutane if the
specific rotation of the mixture is -3.18?.

gt
17
(No Transcript)
18
Chirality of Conformers
  • If equilibrium exists between two chiral
    conformers, molecule is not chiral.
  • Judge chirality by looking at the most
    symmetrical conformer.
  • Cyclohexane can be considered to be planar, on
    average.
    gt

19
Mobile Conformers
20
Nonmobile Conformers
  • If the conformer is sterically hindered, it may
    exist as enantiomers.

gt
21
Allenes
  • Chiral compounds with no chiral carbon
  • Contains sp hybridized carbon with adjacent
    double bonds -CCC-
  • End carbons must have different groups.

22
(No Transcript)
23
Fischer Projections
24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
Fischer Guidelines
  • Fischer formulas only have meaning for structures
    with stereo centers
  • Fischer formulas may only be rotated 180o in the
    plane of the paper
  • Any even number of exchange of groups around a
    stereocenter produces the original configuration
  • If manipulation outlined in 2 or 3 allows one
    Fischer projection to superimpose on another,
    they are the same steroisomer
  • Any one exchange of groups around a stereocenter
    produces the other stereoisomer (R? S, S? R)

27
(No Transcript)
28
Fischer Projections
  • recall for Fischer projection horizontal bonds
    point toward you vertical bonds point away
  • staggered conformation does not have correct
    orientation of bonds for Fischer projection

29
Fischer projections
  • transform molecule to eclipsed conformation in
    order to construct Fischer projection

30
2,3-Butanediol
3
2
  • Consider a molecule with two equivalently
    substituted stereogenic centers such as
    2,3-butanediol.

31
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
2R,3R
2S,3S
2R,3S
chiral
chiral
achiral
32
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
2R,3R
2S,3S
2R,3S
chiral
chiral
achiral
33
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
these two areenantiomers
2R,3R
2S,3S
chiral
chiral
34
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
these two areenantiomers Mirror Plane Rotate
180o
2R,3R
2S,3S
chiral
chiral
35
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
2R,3S
the third structure is superposable on its mirror
image (rotate 180o)
achiral
36
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
CH3
  • therefore, this structure and its mirror image
    are the same
  • it is called a meso form
  • a meso form is an achiral molecule that has
    stereogenic centers

H
HO
H
HO
CH3
2R,3S
achiral
37
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
  • meso forms have a plane of symmetry and/or a
    center of symmetry
  • plane of symmetry is most common case
  • top half of molecule is mirror image of bottom
    half

2R,3S
achiral
38
Three stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol
A line downthe center ofthe Fischer projection
of ameso formbisects it intotwo mirror-image
halves.
2R,3S
achiral
39
Fischer (R) and (S)
  • Lowest priority (usually H) comes forward, so
    assignment rules are backwards!
  • Clockwise 1-2-3 is (S) and counterclockwise 1-2-3
    is (R).
  • Example

40
Two or More Chiral Carbons
  • Enantiomer? Diastereomer? Meso? Assign (R) or
    (S) to each chiral carbon.
  • Enantiomers have opposite configurations at each
    corresponding chiral carbon.
  • Diastereomers have some matching, some opposite
    configurations.
  • Meso compounds have internal mirror plane.
  • Maximum number is 2n, where n the number of
    chiral carbons.
    gt

41
Examples
gt
42
(No Transcript)
43
(No Transcript)
44
(No Transcript)
45
(No Transcript)
46
(No Transcript)
47
(No Transcript)
48
(No Transcript)
49
(No Transcript)
50
AbsoluteandRelative Configuration
R, S convention is ABSOLUTE
51
Fischer-Rosanoff Convention
  • Before 1951, only relative configurations could
    be known.
  • Sugars and amino acids with same relative
    configuration as ()-glyceraldehyde were assigned
    D and same as (-)-glyceraldehyde were assigned L.
  • With X-ray crystallography, now know absolute
    configurations D is (R) and L is (S).
  • No relationship to dextro- or levorotatory.

    gt

52
D and L Assignments



53
(No Transcript)
54
Configuration
  • Relative configuration compares the arrangement
    of atoms in space of one compound with those of
    another.
  • Absolute configuration is the precise
    arrangement of atoms in space.

55
Relative configuration
Pd, H2
a 33.2
a 13.5
  • No bonds are made or broken at the stereogenic
    centerin this experiment. Therefore, when
    ()-3-buten-2-ol and ()-2-butanol have the same
    sign of rotation, the arrangement of atoms in
    space is analogous. The twohave the same
    relative configuration.

56
Two possibilities

H2, Pd
H2, Pd
  • But in the absence of additional information, we
    can't tell which structure corresponds
    to()-3-buten-2-ol, and which one to
    ()-3-buten-2-ol.

57
Two possibilities

H2, Pd
H2, Pd
  • Nor can we tell which structure corresponds
    to()-2-butanol, and which one to ()-2-butanol.

58
Absolute configurations

H2, Pd
a 33.2
a 13.5
H2, Pd
a 13.5
a 33.2
59
Relative configuration
HBr
a -5.8
a 4.0
  • Not all compounds that have the same
    relativeconfiguration have the same sign of
    rotation. No bondsare made or broken at the
    stereogenic center in thereaction shown, so the
    relative positions of the atoms are the same.
    Yet the sign of rotation changes.

60
(No Transcript)
61
Resolution of Enantiomers
  • React a racemic mixture with a chiral compound to
    form diastereomers, which can be separated.

gt
62
(No Transcript)
63
Strategy
enantiomers
64
Strategy
enantiomers
2R()
diastereomers
65
Strategy
enantiomers
C()R()
2R()
C(-)R()
diastereomers
66
Strategy
C()
enantiomers
R()
C()R()
2R()
C(-)R()
R()
diastereomers
C(-)
67
(No Transcript)
68
(No Transcript)
69
ChromatographicResolution of Enantiomers
gt
70
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com