6.1.1

Optical Isomerism (A2 Only)

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Optical Isomerism

Optical isomerism is a form of stereoisomerism. Optical isomers (also called enantiomers) are non-superimposable mirror images of each other.

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Non-superimposable mirror images

  • Much like your left and right hands, some molecules have mirror images.
  • These mirror images are non-superimposable upon each other.
  • This means that they have a different spatial structure.
  • No matter how you twist your hands, you can’t make a left hand into a right hand.
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Chiral centres

  • Molecules that have four different groups bonded to one carbon atom have two mirror images which are non-superimposable.
  • The carbon atom with four different attached groups is called a chiral center. Chiral centers lead to chirality in molecules.
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Drawing chiral centres

  • Dashed bonds indicate an atom below the plane of the paper.
  • Thick wedge bonds indicate an atom above the plane of the paper.
  • The different optical isomers of bromohydroxyacetonitrile are above.
    • Try rotating them to make them the same - you can’t!

Drawing Enantiomers

You need to be able to draw the enantiomers for chiral molecules.

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Step 1 - Find chiral centre

  • The chiral centre is at the carbon atom that is bonded to four different atoms or groups of atoms.
  • The molecule shown above has a chiral centre at the carbon atom which is circled.
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Step 2 - Draw one enantionmer

  • Draw the four different atoms or groups of atoms in any order around the chiral centre.
    • Wedged line - shows the bond that's coming out of the paper.
    • Dotted line - shows the bond that's going beneath the paper.
    • Normal filled lines - show the bonds that are in the plane of the paper.
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Step 3 - Draw other enantiomer

  • Draw a dotted line to the right of the first enantiomer.
  • Draw the mirror image on the other side of the dotted line.
  • You should now have two molecules on either side of the dotted line.
  • The two molecules will be non-superimposable and they are enantiomers of each other!

Plane-Polarised Light

Optical isomers are called 'optical' because of how they interact with polarised light.

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Plane-polarised light

  • Light has a property called polarisation.
  • If light is plane-polarised, this means that all the light waves have the same polarisation.
    • You can think of plane-polarised light like the edge of a piece of paper held in the air. It can be horizontal, or vertical, or anything in between. Light is the same.
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Optical activity of enantiomers

  • Enantiomers will rotate plane-polarised light in different directions:
    • Light will be rotated in an anticlockwise direction by one enantiomer.
    • Light will be rotated in a clockwise direction by the other enantiomer.
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Racemates

  • Some reactions can produce one specific enantiomer, others will produce an equal mixture of enantiomers.
  • An equal mixture of enantiomers is called a racemate.
  • Racemates are optically inactive because the different optical activities of each enantiomer exactly cancel each other out.

Jump to other topics

1Physical Chemistry

2Physical Chemistry 2 (A2 Only)

3Inorganic Chemistry

4Inorganic Chemistry 2 (A2 Only)

5Organic Chemistry 1

6Organic Chemistry 2 (A2 Only)

6.1Optical Isomerism (A2 Only)

6.2Aldehydes & Ketones (A2 Only)

6.3Carboxylic Acids & Esters (A2 Only)

6.4Aromatic Chemistry (A2 Only)

6.5Amines (A2 Only)

6.6Polymers (A2 Only)

6.7Biological Organic (A2 Only)

6.8Organic Synthesis (A2 Only)

6.9NMR Spectroscopy (A2 Only)

6.10Chromatography (A2 Only)

6.11A-A* (AO3/4) - Organic 2

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