English
Noun
stereoisomerism
- a form or isomerism in which atoms are arranged differently about a chiral centre (or centre of asymmetry); they exhibit optical
activity; in a molecule with a single chiral centre the two
isomers (enantiomers)
are mirror
images of each other; in a molecule with multiple chiral centres the
isomers (diastereoisomers) are
not normally mirror images
Translations
Synonyms
See also
Stereoisomers are
isomeric molecules whose atomic
connectivity is the same but whose atomic arrangement in space is
different.
Enantiomers
Enantiomers are two stereoisomers that are
related to each other by a reflection: they are
mirror
images of each other, which are non-superimposable. Human hands
are a macroscopic example of stereoisomerism. Every
stereogenic
center in one has the opposite configuration in the other. Two
compounds that are enantiomers of each other have the same physical
properties, except for the direction in which they rotate
polarized
light and how they interact with different
optical
isomers of other compounds. For this reason, pure enantiomers
exhibit the phenomenon of
optical
activity and can be separated only with the use of a
chiral
agent. In nature, only one enantiomer of most chiral biological
compounds, such as
amino acids
(except glycine), is present. As a result, different enantiomers of
a compound may have substantially different biological
effects.
Diastereomers
Diastereomers
are stereoisomers not related through a reflection operation. They
are not mirror images of each other. These include
meso
compounds, cis-trans (E-Z) isomers, and non-enantiomeric
optical
isomers. Diastereomers seldom have the same physical
properties. In the example shown below, the meso form of tartaric
acid forms a diastereomeric pair with both levo and dextro tartaric
acids, which form an enantiomeric pair.
Cis-trans and E-Z isomerism
Stereoisomerism about double
bonds arises because rotation about the double bond is restricted,
keeping the substituents fixed relative to each other. If the
substituents on either end of a double bond are the same, it is not
considered a stereo bond.
Traditionally, double bond stereochemistry was
described as either cis (Latin, on this side) or trans (Latin,
across). (The terms cis and trans are also used to describe the
relative position of two substituents on a ring; cis if on the same
side, otherwise trans.) Due to occasional ambiguity, IUPAC adopted
a more rigorous system wherein the substituents at each end of the
double bond are assigned priority numbers. If the high priority
substituents are on the same side of the bond it is assigned Z
(Ger. zusammen, together). If they are on opposite sides it is E
(Ger. entgegen, opposite).
An example of double bond stereoisomerism is
1,2-dichloroethene,
C2H2Cl2. Molecule I is Z-1,2-dichloroethene (chlorines on same side
- the top) and molecule II (chlorines on opposite sides) is
E-1,2-dichloroethene. There is no way of "superimposing" the
structures on each other through bond rotation, because of the
central double bond of C=C (composed of a
sigma bond and
a
pi
bond), through which rotation is not allowed. If rotation were
allowed, such as a single bond would allow, these two molecules
would be the same.
In contrast, for
1,2-dichloroethane,
C2H4Cl2, which is similar except that it has an extra H attached to
each C and a single bond, the E- and Z- forms do not exist. Since
the carbon atoms can rotate around the single bond, in a flat
projection of the molecule, all three atoms attached to one carbon
could swap places and still represent the same structure.
Configurational isomers are diastereomers and can
possess different physical, biological and chemical
properties.
Conformers
Conformational isomerism is a form of isomerism
that describes the phenomenon of molecules with the same structural
formula having different shapes due to rotations about one or more
bonds. Different conformations can have different energies, can
usually interconvert, and are very rarely isolatable. For example,
cyclohexane can
exist in a variety of different conformations including a chair
conformation and a boat conformation, but for cyclohexane itself,
these can never be separated. The boat conformation represents an
energy maximum (and not a transition state) on the conformational
itinerary between the two equivalent chair forms. There are some
molecules that can be isolated in several conformations, due to the
large energy barriers between different conformations.
2,2,2',2'-Tetrasubstituted biphenyls can fit into this latter
category.
stereoisomerism in Arabic: تزامر فراغي
stereoisomerism in Danish: Stereoisomer
stereoisomerism in Spanish: Estereoisómero
stereoisomerism in French: Stéréoisomérie
stereoisomerism in Italian: Stereoisomero
stereoisomerism in Dutch: Stereo-isomeer
stereoisomerism in Japanese: 立体異性体
stereoisomerism in Norwegian:
Stereoisomeri
stereoisomerism in Polish: Stereoizomery
stereoisomerism in Portuguese: Isomeria
espacial
stereoisomerism in Serbian:
Стереоизомерија
stereoisomerism in Finnish:
Stereoisomeria