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Chirality?


ChemSiddiqui

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Chirality is essentially when two molecules are mirror images of each other. They are non-superimposable.

 

Using carbon as an example, a molecule such as CH4 cannot be chiral, as you can rotate it any which way, and it will still be superimposable. However, a molecule of (say) CFBrCl and its mirror image will be non-superimposable, causing it to be chiral.

 

In the citronellol case, essentially, you are looking for a carbon molecule that has 4 different substituent groups. If you take the entire citronellol molecule and mirror it, you will have the other enantiomer.

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Think of it as your hands. They are very similar, but they are non-overlappable. The two hands are mutual mirror images.

 

Indeed, each C-atom with 4 different groups attached to it is a chiral center. In more complicated molecules, it may be quite hard to find all of them, usually they contain multiple chiral centers.

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