Title: 6.6%20%20Acid-Catalyzed%20Hydration%20of%20Alkenes
1Chirality
2Chirality
A molecule is chiral if its two mirror-image
forms are not superimposable in three dimensions.
The word chiral is derived from the Greek word
cheir, meaning hand.
Chirality most often occurs in molecules that
contain a carbon that is attached to four
different groups.
3Enantiomers
Stereoisomers that are related as an object and
its nonsuperimposable mirror image are classified
as enantiomers.
4Rotating Molecules in Space
To check whether the representations are
superposable first rotate the molecule around so
that the H is in the same direction.
5Rotating molecules in Space
After rotation of B check if it is superposable
with A. The H and the F are superposable but the
Br and Cl are not. So, non-superposable mirror
images that are enantiomers.
6Chirality Center
Molecules of the general type CWXYZ are chiral
when w, x, y, and z are different.
2-Butanol is chiral four different groups on C-2.
2-Propanol is achiral two of the groups on C-2
are the same.
7Common Chiral Molecules
Linalool, a pleasant smelling oil from oranges.
Limonene, a constituent of lemon oil. C-4 is the
chirality center.
8Chirality with Isotopes
Achiral alkanes can be transformed into chiral
molecules by replacing H with deuterium (D) or
tritium (T) as shown in this molecule
Isotopic labelling can be used to learn
information about the mechanism of reactions.
For example
9Symmetry in Achiral Compounds
A molecule that has either a plane of symmetry
or, a center of symmetry will be superposable on
its mirror image and therefore achiral.
10Plane of Symmetry
A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule so that
one half of the molecule is the mirror image of
the other half. This achiral molecule,
chlorodifluoromethane, has the plane of symmetry
shown.
11Center of Symmetry
A point is a center of symmetry if any line drawn
from it to some element of the structure will,
when extended an equal distance in the opposite
direction, encounter an identical element.
12Optical Activity
A sample is optically active if it rotates the
plane of polarized light.
To be optically active, the sample must contain a
chiral substance and one enantiomer must be
present in excess of the other.
13Optical Activity
The direction and magnitude of rotation are cited
as a, the observed rotation.
Mixtures of enantiomers are characterized by
the enantiomeric excess (ee). ee ( major
enantiomer) ( minor enantiomer)
If ee 100 the sample is enantiopure. A 11
mixtures of enantiomers are called racemic
mixtures. Racemic mixtures are optically
inactive.
All achiral substances are optically inactive.
14Specific Rotation
Specific rotation a is the rotation adjusted
for concentrationand the length of the sample
cell.
a can be used to determine the sample purity.
Enantiomers have a of equal magnitude but
oppositesign.
15Absolute Configuration
The exact three-dimensional spatial arrangement
of substituents at a chirality center is its
absolute configuration.
Cannot decide which is ()-2-butanol, or
(-)-2-butanol!
16Relative Configuration
Compounds have the same relative configuration if
the configuration of the chirality center is the
same. In these reactions the reactant and
product have the same relative configuration
because the reactions do not affect the chirality
center.
17From Relative Configuration to Absolute
Configuration
Absolute configuration of a salt of () tartaric
acid was determined in 1951 by X-ray
crystallography. The absolute configurations of
all compounds related to ()-tartaric acid were
then known.In this way the absolute
configuration of the enantiomers of 2-butanol are
known.
18The Cahn-Ingold-Prelog Rules
- 1. Rank the substituents at the chirality center
according to rules used in E-Z notation.highest
-OH gt CH2CH3 gt CH3 gt H lowest - 2. Orient the molecule so that lowest-ranked
substituent points away from you and ignore the
lowest-ranked substituent.
becomes
19The Cahn-Ingold-Prelog Rules
- 3. If the order of decreasing precedence traces a
clockwise path, the absolute configuration is R.
If the path is counterclockwise, the
configuration is S.
becomes
So the name is (S)-2-Butanol.
20Names of Enantiomers
The pair of enantiomers differ only in the
arrangement of atoms in space so the name only
differs in the R/S assignment.
21Chirality Center in a Ring
Remember a CC double bond is treated like two
bondsto a C.
and the configuration is R
()-4-methylcyclohexene
22Fischer Projections
- For a Fischer projection the molecule is oriented
so that the vertical bonds at the chirality
center are directed away from you and the
horizontal bonds point toward you. - The chirality center is at the center of a cross
and notspecified.
23Fischer Projections
- The molecule is oriented so that the lowest
numbered carbon is at the top of the chain.
24Properties of Enantiomers
- Some enantiomers have different odors. Each
enantiomer reacts with the receptors in the nose
differently. This is chiral recognition which
is common in nature where receptors interact
with only one enantiomer.
25Chiral Drugs
- Many drugs have a chirality center, two examples
are ibuprofen and thalidomide. Often only one
enantiomer is active.
(S)-Ibuprofen has pain-relieving properties while
the (R)-enantiomer does not. (R)-Thalidomide
was used for its anti-nausea properties. The
(S)-enantiomer caused birth defects.
26Chirality Axis
- A chirality axis is an axis about which a set of
atoms or groups is arranged so that the spatial
arrangement is notsuperposable on its mirror
image.Substituted biaryls like biphenyl may
have chirality axes and exist as two
non-superposable enantiomers.
27Chirality Axis
- Unsubstituted biphenyl (A, B, X, Y H) is
nonplanar but can rotate about the C-C single
bond to interchange between conformations
rapidly. With substituents A, B, X, Y the
conformations are locked and cannot interchange.
28Chirality Axis
- The compound below was demonstrated to exist as
two enantiomers with a chirality axis in 1922!
These isomers are known as atropisomers, from the
Greek a meaning not and tropos meaning turn.
29Chirality Axis
- Many compounds with chiral axes are incorporated
intometal catalysts. These catalysts mediate
reactions that are enantiospecific and yield
predominantly one enantiomer as product. Binap
is one example used in chiral drug synthesis.
30Reactions that Create Chiral Centers
- Many of the reactions we have examined so far
often form chiral centers.
The central carbon of the epoxide is a chirality
center with four different groups attached.
31Reactions that Create Chiral Centers
- The alkene is planar so the peroxyacid attacks
the alkenefrom the top or the bottom.
32Reactions that Create Chiral Centers
- Addition of HBr to an alkene can generate a
chirality center.
Chlorination of alkanes can generate a chirality
center.
Both reactions form a 11 mixture of enantiomers
whichis a racemic mixture.
33Reactions that Create Chiral Centers
Optically inactive starting materials can give
optically active products only if they are
treated with an optically active reagent or if
the reaction is catalyzed by an optically active
substance.In nature the chiral catalyst is an
enzyme.
34Molecules with two Chirality Centers
Consider 2,3-dihydroxybutanoic acid.
- Carbons 2 and 3 are chirality centers. Each
stereocentercould be R or S so there are four
possible stereoisomers(2R, 3R) (2S, 3S) (2R,
3S) (2S, 3R).
35Stereoisomers of 1,2-Dihydroxybutanoic acid
Stereoisomers I and II are enantiomers of each
other
Stereoisomers III and IV are enantiomers of each
other
36Stereoisomers of 1,2-Dihydroxybutanoic acid
Stereoisomers I and III are diastereomers of each
other.
Diastereomers are stereoisomers that are not
enantiomers.Pairs of diastereomers I and
III I and IV II and III II and IV.
37Stereoisomers of 1,2-Dihydroxybutanoic acid
Enantiomers Are mirror images of each
other. With two stereocenters in a molecule the
enantiomer has the configuration changed at both
stereocenters. Enantiomers have equal and
opposite specific rotations.
Diastereomers Are stereoisomers that are not
mirror images. With two stereocenters in a
molecule a diastereomer has the configuration
changed at only one stereocenter. Diastereomers
will have different magnitude and direction
specific rotations.
38Fischer Projections of 1,2-Dihydroxybutanoic Acid
Setting up the Fischer ProjectionDraw the
structure so that the lowest numbered carbon is
at the top. Arrange horizontal bonds to be facing
towards you. Then flatten the molecule and draw
it out.
39Fischer Projections of 1,2-Dihydroxybutanoic Acid
Fischer Projection of compounds with multiple
stereocenters simplifies identification of
enantiomers and diastereomers.
Erythreo isomers have like substituents on the
same side. Threo isomers have like substituents
on opposite sides.
40Physical Properties of Diastereomers
Physical properties of enantiomers are identical
except for the rotation of plane polarized
light. Diastereomers may differ in any physical
property, for example
41Stereoisomers of 1-bromo-2-chlorocyclopropane
Two stereocenters in a ring may also give rise to
four stereoisomers which can be grouped as two
pairs of enantiomers.
42Symmetric Molecules with two Chirality Centers
- 2,3-Butanediol has two chirality centers that are
equivalently substituted.
There are only three stereoisomers not four.
Why?
43Stereoisomers of 2,3-Butanediol
- These are the three stereoisomers.
Compound (c) has a plane of symmetry and is
superposable on its mirror image. This is a
molecule with chirality centers that is achiral
(not chiral) and is named a meso form. It
issuperposable on its mirror image so there are
only three stereoisomers.
44Stereoisomers of 2,3-Butanediol
- These stereoisomers can be shown as Fischer
projections.
The dashed line represents the plane of symmetry.
45Stereoisomers of 1,2-dibromocyclopropane
- This molecule has three stereoisomers. The cis
compoundhas a plane of symmetry and is a meso
compound.
46Molecules with Multiple Chirality Centers
- A molecule with n stereocenters can have a
maximum of 2n stereoisomers.
This carbohydrate has 4 stereocenters and no
planes of symmetry so there are 24 16
stereoisomers.
47Molecules with Multiple Chirality Centers
- Steroids also contain multiple stereocenters.
Cholic acid shown here has 11 stereocenters and
potentionally 211 or 2048 stereoisomers. Only
one has been isolated from natural sources.
48Alkenes and Chirality Centers
- Molecules that include both an alkene and a
chirality centermay exist as 4 stereoisomers
(R,E), (R,Z), (S,E) and (S,Z).For example
3-penten-2-ol
-enantiomers-
-enantiomers-
49Reactions that Produce Diastereomers
- Reaction of 2-butene with bromine yields
2,3-dibromobutanewhich has two identically
substituted chirality centers. - The product can therefore exist as a pair of
enantiomers and a meso compound.
The actual product formed depends on the
stereochemistry of the alkene and the anti
addition of bromine.
50Effect of Alkene Stereochemistry
- Anti addition of bromine to the (E) stereoisomer
yields the meso product.
meso-2,3-dibromobutane
meso-2,3-dibromobutane
A single achiral product is formed!
51Effect of Alkene Stereochemistry
- Anti addition of bromine to the (Z) stereoisomer
yields a (11) racemic mixture of enatiomers.
(2S,3S)-2,3-dibromobutane
(2R,3R)-2,3-dibromobutane
A 11 (racemic) mixture of enantiomers is formed.
52Generating a Second Chirality Center
- Hydrogenation of the alkene below yields two
stereoisomers.The major product corresponds to
hydrogenation from the least hindered side of
the alkene.
The reaction is stereoselective one
stereoisomer is formed as the major product.
53Resolution with Tartaric Acid
- The first resolution was carried out by Louis
Pasteur in 1848using tartaric acid.
Pasteur separated a salt of a rare racemic
mixture of tartaric acid based using a
micrsocope and tweezers.
54Resolution of Enantiomers
- Enantiomers only differ in the rotation of plane
polarized light but diastereomers may differ in
other physical properties and may be separated.
The strategy (1) Transform the mix of
enantiomers into a mix of diastereomers as a
salt for separation.(2) Separate the
diastereomeric mixture(3) Reform the separated
enantiomer.
55Resolution of Enantiomers
Graphical representation.
56Forming Diasteromeric Salts
- Enantiomers are transformed into diastereomeric
salts by acid-base reactions.
The compounds used for resolution are generally
derivedfrom natural sources, for example
(S)-malic acid fromapples.
57Dissociating the Diastereomeric Salts
- After separation of the diastereomeric salts the
separatedsalts are treated with base to
regenerate the enantiomer
58Kinetic Resolution
- Kinetic resolution depends on the different rates
of reactions of two enantiomers with a chiral
compound (enzyme).
One enantiomer of the ester is hydrolyzed
preferentially. The product of that reaction is
isolated as a pure enantiomer while the
unreacted enantiomer can be isolated as well.