Organic Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
advanced materials
biological sciences
Lectures on
Stereochemistry
Nucleophilic Substitution at a
Saturated Carbon
Conformational Analysis
Pericyclic Reactions
Lecture 1
Stereochemistry
Why stereochemistry ?
Biological importance of chirality
Chirality is a phenomenon that pervades the universe
Human body is structurally chiral
Helical seashells are chiral
Most plants show chirality in the way they wind around
supporting structures
Most of the molecules that make up plants and animals
are chiral and usually one form of the chiral molecule
occurs in a given species
All but one of the 20 amino acids are chiral and L-form
Almost all natural sugars are chiral
DNA itself has a helical structure and all naturally occurring
DNA turns to right.
Chiral molecules can show different handeness in
many ways, including the way they affect human beings
H
O
11-cis-retinal
absorbs light when we see
COOH
tretinoin
treatment of skin disease
-carotene
a precursor of Vitamin A, found in carrots, sweet potatoes
Enantiomeric
smell
R- (+)-limonene
smell of orange
S- (-)-limonene
smell of lemons
CO2Me
strong odour
(+)-Z-methyl epijasmonate
O
Jasmone
CO2Me
odourless
(-)-Z-methyl epijasmonate
Japonilure
Me
*
COOH
Ibuprofen
500 mg of one tablet contains only half of its as active drug
Me
Me
COOH
S is active
COOH
R is inactive
HO
HO
NH2
NH2
HO
CO2H
L-dopa
marketed as a
single enantiomer
HO
Me
CO2H
D-dopa
toxic
CO2H
MeO
(S)-Naproxen
(only this has anti-inflammatory activity)
Me
Me
NMe2
Me2N
C
C
O
O
O
Darvon
(Pain killer)
Novrad
(anticough agent)
Thalidomide tragedy
O
N
O
N
H
Thalidomide
By the year 2010 chiral drugs, whether enantiomerically pure or sold as a racemic mixture, will dominate
drug markets. It is therefore important to understand how drug chirality affects its interaction with drug
targets and to be able to use proper nomenclature in describing the drugs themselves and the nature of forces
responsible for those interactions.
Some examples of structures other than chemical structures which are chiral
HO
R
CN
H
NC
CN
Approach from front face of the carbonyl
O
HO
R
R
H
OH
H
CN
H
CN
Approach from back face of the carbonyl
NC
HO
OH
CN
A & B are enantiomers
H
A
(Mirror images)
CN
Me
HO
Me
CN
Me
Acetone Cyanohydrine
So, any structure that has no plane of symmetry can exist as two mirror-image forms
(enantiomers)
Stereogenic centres
If a molecule contains one carbon atom carrying four different groups it will not have a plane of
symmetry and must therefore be chiral. A carbon atom carrying four different groups is a
stereogenic or chiral centre
Stereoisomers & Constitutional isomers
OH
R
OH
CN
CN
HO
R
CN
HO
R
Constitutional isomrs
CN
H
Enantiomers
NC
CN
CN
H
HO
R
CN
H
two configurations :
going from one enantiomer to
the other requires a bond to be
broken
HO
R
CN
H
NC
R
H
OH
H
R
OH
CN
Racemic mixture
A racemic mixture is a mixture of two enantiomers
in equal proportion
MeMgCl
CHO
Consisting of
50
OH
HO
CHO
OH
Consisting of
HO
OH
50
HO
50
OH
H
O
50
Cahn-Ingold-Prelog rules :
HO
Absolute configuration :
The R & S notation
CH3
CH3
H
OH
CH2
CH2
CH3
CH3
Sequence rules:
1.
H (d)
CH2 ?
CH3
CH3
HO
H, H, H
H (d)
(b)
CH2
H, H
CH3
CH3
HO
H
CH2
CH3
OH a
CH2CH3
b
(Y) (C)
(Y) (C)
C
(Y) (C)
CH2CH3
CH CH2
both CH
So move to next carbon
H
(C) (C)
H, H, C
H, C, C
Chiroptical properties
Enantiomers have the same chemical and physical properties (melting
points, boiling points, heat of combustion etc.), except for their interaction
with plane polarised light or with other chiral molecules (reagents,
solvents, catalysts etc).
(think about how your feet feel if you put them in the wrong shoes).
Any material which rotates the plane of the polarized light is termed "optically
active." Compounds featuring chiral centers are optically active unless they
possess symmetry plane or a symmetry center (see above). An isomer of
optically active compound can rotate the plane of polarized light to the left
(levorotatory), in which case it will be designated (l, or -), or to the right
(dextrorotatory) in which case it will be termed (d, or +).
CH2OH
CH2OH
H
Me
Et
(S)-2-methyl-1-butanol
(R)-2-methyl-1-butanol
+5.75 specific rotation []D20-5.75
Me
Et
[] =
lxc
optical purity
=
(enantiomeric excess; ee) specific rotation of the pure enantiomer
The L/D systems relies on the chemical correlation of the configuration of the chiral center to Dglyceraldehyde. The compounds which can be correlated without inverting the chiral center are
named D (capital D), those correlated to its enantiomer are designated as L (capital L).
The accepted convention for drawing D(+)-glyceraldehyde places the hydrogen atom
at the left and the hydroxyl at the right, with the aldehyde at the top.
CHO
H
CHO
OH
HO
CH2OH
CH2OH
D(+)-glyceraldehyde
L(-)-glyceraldehyde
Room
F 116
SDG
F 127
AR
F 131
SC
F 132
KSG
10
F 142
ST
Wedge projection
Fisher projection:
The tetrahedral atom is viewed
perpendicularly to an edge formed
by connecting two of its ligands.
The convention is that the two
vertical bonds in the projection are
pointing behind the plane of
projection (plane of paper sheet),
and the two horizontal bonds are
pointing towards the viewer.
Wedge projection:
It is obtained by viewing the tetrahedral center perpendicularly to the plane formed by three atoms.
One of the remaining atoms is oriented behind the plane of projection (dashed bond), one towards the viewer (boldface
bond).
Note that, in contrast to Fisher projection, the rotation of the wedge projection about axes perpendicular or coplanar with the
plane of projection does not change anything.
This projection is therefore by far less ambiguous than Fisher projection.
In the case of large linear molecule the molecule backbone has to be drawn in the fully extended conformation.
Sawhorse projection:
The C-C bond is viewed at an angle. The atom shown on the left of the projection is also the one in
the front. This projection is difficult to use with acyclic molecules but is most popular for
representation of cyclic molecules e.g. saturated six-membered rings.
Newman projection:
The molecule with two tetrahedral centers is viewed along the C-C axis. The atom in front
is represented as a three-way branch, the atom in the back as a circle with three outgoing
bonds. This projection is most useful inconsideration of steric relation between ligands
linked to adjacent tetrahedral centers and is most popular
a
d
a
b
Wedge projection
Fisher projection
rotate
a
d
c
tilt
b
a
c
b
d
d
c
a
b
x
c
z
a
x
c
x
y
a
z
Newman projection
c
x
y
Sawhorse projection
Fisher projection
b
z
y
b
z
a
Resolvable ?
N cannot achieve a 1200 bond angle
in a 3-membered ring
The two enantiomers can be separated
C(CH3)3
CH3
P
H3 C
H2C=HCH2C
[]D = 16.80
S-enantiomer
CH3
C(CH3)3
CH3
CH3
Br
H3CH2CH2C
CH2CH3
H3CH2C
Br
CH2CH2CH3
a pair of enantiomers
O
O
P
H3CH2CO
H
OCH3
H3CH2CO
a pair of enantiomers
OCH2CH3
Diastereomers
Diastereomers are stereoisomers that are not mirror images.
Two diastereomers are different compounds and have different
relative stereochemistry.
Diastereomers may be chiral (have no plane of symmetry):
Ar
CO2Me
Ar
CO2Me
O
Diastereomers may be
achiral
OH
OH
plane of symmetry
CH3
H3C
*
CH
Cl
*
CH
OH
3-Chloro-2-butanol
CH3
OH
HO
Cl
Cl
CH3
A
CH3
B
erythro enantiomers
CH3
CH3
H
OH
HO
Cl
H
Cl
CH3
CH3
threo enantiomers
diastereomers
A&C
A&D
B&C
B&D
Tartaric acids
OH
HO2C
OH
HO2C
CO2H
OH
OH
diastereomers
enantiomers
OH
HO2C
HO2C
HO
OH
HO
COOH
meso compound
COOH
COOH
H
CO2H
stereoisomers ?
HO2C
OH
OH
OH
22 = 4
CO2H
OH
COOH
CO2H
OH
HO
COOH
H
OH
COOH
pair of enantiomers
CO2H
S
meso
OH
Me
C
H
C
Me
Me
PPh2
PPh2
N
H
H
N
N
H
H
N
nonsuperimposable enantiomers
&
CH2OH
CHO
O
H
HO
NH2
H
&
H
H
CHO
CH2OH
&
S
OH
NH2
O
S
H
Cl
H
Ph
CH3
Cl
H
&
CH3
Ph
(R)-HOCH2CHOHCH=CH2
KMnO4
HO
O
S
HO
H
Q. Moshers Acid
MeO
CF3
COOH
R or S ?
Recommended Books
1. Organic Chemistry (2nd Ed.) by P. Y. Bruice
2. Organic Chemistry by Clayden, Greeves, Warren and
Wothers
3. A Guide Book to mechanism in Organic Chemistry
by P. Sykes
Not isomers
Yes
isomers
Do the compounds have the same connectivity ?
Yes
NO
Stereoisomer isomer
Constitutional isomer
Yes
Configurational iosmers
cis-trans isomers
Confortional iosmers
Enantiomers
Diastereomers