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Stereoisomers, Enantiomers, Diastereomers, Constitutional Isomers and Meso Compounds

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    In this video, we're going to
    look at pairs of molecules and
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    see if they relate to each other
    in any obvious way or
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    maybe less than obvious way.
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    So these first two right here,
    they actually look like a
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    completely different
    molecules.
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    So your gut impulse might
    be to say that these are
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    completely different
    molecules.
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    And it wouldn't be completely
    off, but we look a little bit
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    closer, you see that this guy
    on the left has one, two,
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    three, four carbons, and so does
    this guy on the right.
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    It has one, two, three,
    four carbons.
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    This guy on the left
    has two, four, six,
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    seven, eight hydrogens.
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    This guy on the right has two,
    four, six, eight hydrogens.
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    And they both have one oxygen.
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    So both of the molecular
    formulas for both of these
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    things are four carbons, eight
    hydrogens, and one oxygen.
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    They're both C4H8O.
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    So they have the same
    molecular formula.
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    They're made up of the same
    thing, so these are going to
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    be isomers.
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    They're going to be isomers,
    and they're a
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    special type of isomers.
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    In this situation, we don't
    have the same bonds.
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    We're made up of the same
    things, but the bonds, what is
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    connected to what
    is different.
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    So we call this a constitutional
    isomer.
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    So we are essentially made up of
    the same things, but we are
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    actually two different molecule,
    actually, two very
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    different molecules here.
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    Now let's look at this
    next guy over here.
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    So if we look at this molecule,
    it does look like
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    this carbon is chiral.
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    It is an asymmetric carbon.
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    It is bonded to four different
    groups: fluorine, bromine,
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    hydrogen, and then
    a methyl group.
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    And so's this one.
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    And they're both made up
    of the same things.
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    You have the carbon-- and not
    only are they made up of the
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    same things, but the bonding
    is the same.
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    So carbon to a fluorine, carbon
    to a fluorine, carbon
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    to a bromine, carbon to a
    bromine, carbon to hydrogen in
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    both of then carbon to the
    methyl group in both.
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    But they don't look
    quite the same.
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    Are they mirror images?
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    Well, no.
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    This guy's mirror image would
    have the fluorine popping out
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    here, the hydrogen going back
    here, and then would have the
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    bromine pointing out here.
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    Let's see if I can somehow get
    from this guy to that guy.
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    Let me flip this guy first. So
    let me-- a good thing to do
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    would be to just flip to see
    the fastest way I could
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    potentially get there.
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    Let me just flip it like this.
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    So I'm going to flip out of
    the page, you can imagine.
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    I'm going to flip
    it like this.
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    So I'm going to take this methyl
    group and then put it
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    on the right-hand side.
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    And you can imagine, I'm going
    to turn it so it would come
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    out of the page and
    then go back down.
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    So if I did that, what
    would it look like?
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    I would have the carbon,
    this carbon here.
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    I would have the methyl group
    on that side now.
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    And then since I flipped it
    over, the bromine was in the
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    plane of the page.
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    It'll still be in the plane of
    the page, but since I flipped
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    it over, the hydrogen, which was
    in the back, will now be
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    in the front.
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    The hydrogen will now be in
    the front and the fluorine
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    will now be in back because
    I flipped it over.
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    So the fluorine is
    now in the back.
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    Now, how does this
    compare to that?
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    Let's see if I can somehow
    get there.
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    Well, if I take this fluorine
    and I rotate it to where the
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    hydrogen is, and I take the
    hydrogen and rotate it to
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    where-- that's all going to
    happen at once-- to where the
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    bromine is, and I take the
    bromine and rotate it to where
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    the fluorine is, I get that.
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    So I can flip it and then I can
    rotate it around this bond
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    axis right there, and I would
    get to that molecule there.
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    So even though they look pretty
    different, with the
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    flip and a rotation, you
    actually see that these are
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    the same a molecule.
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    Next one.
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    So let's see, what
    do we have here?
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    Let me switch colors.
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    So over here, this part
    of both of these
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    molecules look the same.
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    You have the carbons
    on both of them.
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    This carbon looks like
    a chiral center.
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    It's bonded to one, two,
    three different groups.
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    You might say, oh, it's two
    carbons, but this is a methyl
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    group, and then this side has
    all this business over it, so
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    this is definitely
    a chiral carbon.
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    And over, here same thing.
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    It's a chiral carbon.
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    And this has the same thing.
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    It's bonded to four
    different things.
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    So each of these molecules has
    two chiral carbons, and it
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    looks like they're made
    up of the same things.
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    And not only are they made up
    of the same things, but the
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    bonds are made in
    the same way.
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    So this carbon is bonded to a
    hydrogen and a fluorine, and
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    the two other carbons,
    same thing, a
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    hydrogen and a fluorine.
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    Carbon, it looks like
    it's a hydrogen.
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    It's bonded to a hydrogen and a
    chlorine, so it's made up of
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    the same constituents
    and they're
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    bonded in the same way.
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    So these look like--
    but the bonding is
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    a little bit different.
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    Over here on this one on the
    left, the hydrogen goes in the
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    back, and over here, the
    hydrogen's in the front.
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    And over here, the chlorine's
    in back, and over here, the
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    chlorine's in front.
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    So these look like
    sterioisomers.
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    You saw earlier in this video,
    you saw structural isomers,
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    made up of the same
    things but the
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    connections are all different.
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    Stereoisomers, they're made
    up of the same thing, the
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    connections are the same, but
    the three-dimensional
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    configuration is a little
    bit different.
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    For example, here on this
    carbon, it's connected to the
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    same things as this carbon, but
    over here, the fluorine's
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    out front, and over here--
    out here, the
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    fluorine's out front.
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    Over here, the fluorine's
    backwards.
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    And same thing for the
    chlorine here.
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    It's back here and
    it's front here.
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    Now, let's see if they're
    related in a more nuanced way.
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    You could imagine putting
    a mirror behind.
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    I guess the best way to
    visualize it, imagine putting
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    a mirror behind this molecule.
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    If you put a mirror behind this
    molecule, what would its
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    reflection look like?
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    So if you put a mirror behind
    it, in the image of the
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    mirror, this hydrogen would now,
    since the mirror's behind
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    this whole molecule, this
    hydrogen is actually closer to
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    the mirror.
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    So then the mirror image, you
    would have a hydrogen that's
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    pointed out, and then you would
    have the carbon, and
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    then you would have the fluorine
    being further away.
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    And same thing in the
    mirror image here.
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    You would have the chlorine
    coming closer since this
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    chlorine is further back, closer
    to the mirror, and then
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    you would have the hydrogen
    pointing outwards like that.
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    And then, obviously, the rest
    of the molecule would look
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    exactly the same.
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    And so this mirror image that I
    just thought about in white
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    is exactly what this molecule
    is: hydrogen pointing out in
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    front, hydrogen pointing
    out in front.
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    You might say, wait, this
    hydrogen is on the right, this
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    one's on the left.
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    It doesn't matter.
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    This is actually saying that
    the hydrogen's pointing out
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    front, the fluorine is pointing
    out back, hydrogen up
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    front, fluorine back, chlorine
    out front, hydrogen back,
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    chlorine out front,
    hydrogen back.
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    So these are actually mirror
    images, but they're not the
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    easy mirror images that we've
    done in the past where the
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    mirror was just like that
    in between the two.
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    This one is a mirror image where
    you place the mirror
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    either on top of or behind
    one of the molecules.
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    So this is a class of
    stereoisomers, and we've
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    brought up this word before.
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    We call this enantiomers.
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    So if each of these are an
    enantiomers, I'll say they are
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    enantiomers of each other.
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    They're steroisomers.
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    They're made up of the same
    molecules, so that they have
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    the same constituents.
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    They also have the same
    connections, and not only do
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    they have the same connections,
    that so far gets
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    us a steroisomer, but they are a
    special kind of stereoisomer
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    called an enantiomer, where they
    are actual mirror images
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    of each other.
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    Now, what is this one
    over here in blue?
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    Just like the last one, it looks
    like it's made up of the
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    same things.
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    You have these carbons, these
    carbons, these carbons and
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    hydrogens up there.
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    Same thing over there.
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    You have a hydrogen, bromine,
    hydrogen and a bromine,
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    hydrogen, chlorine, hydrogen,
    chlorine, hydrogen, chlorine,
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    hydrogen, chlorine.
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    So it's made up of
    the same things.
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    They're connected in the same
    way, so they're definitely
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    stereoisomers.
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    Well, we have to make sure
    they're not-- well, let's make
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    sure they're not the same
    molecule first. Here,
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    hydrogen's in the front.
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    There, hydrogen's in the back.
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    Here, hydrogen is in the back.
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    Here, hydrogen is
    in the front.
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    So they're not the
    same molecule.
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    They have a different
    three-dimensional
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    configuration, although their
    bond connections are the same,
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    so these are stereoisomers.
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    Let's see if they're
    enantiomers.
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    So if we look at it like this,
    you put a mirror here, you
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    wouldn't get this
    guy over here.
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    Then you would have a chlorine
    out front and a hydrogen.
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    So you won't get it if you
    get a mirror over there.
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    But if we do the same exercise
    that we did in the last pair,
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    if you put a mirror behind this
    guy, and I'm just going
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    to focus on the stuff that's
    just forward and back, because
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    that's what's relevant
    if the mirror is
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    sitting behind the molecule.
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    So if the mirror's sitting
    behind the molecule, this
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    bromine is actually closer to
    the mirror than that hydrogen.
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    So the bromine will now be out
    front and then the hydrogen
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    will be in back.
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    This hydrogen will
    be in the back.
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    I'm trying to do kind of a
    mirror image if it's hard to
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    conceptualize.
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    And then that would
    all look the same.
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    And then this chlorine will
    now be out front, and this
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    hydrogen will now be in the back
    in our mirror image, if
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    you can visualize it.
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    And then we have another one.
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    And this chlorine is closer to
    the mirror that it's kind of
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    been sitting on top of.
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    So in the mirror image, it would
    be pointing out, and
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    then this hydrogen would
    be pointing back.
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    Now let's see, is our mirror
    image the same as this?
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    So the mirror image, our bromine
    is pointing in the
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    front, hydrogen in
    the back there.
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    Then we have hydrogen in-- then
    in our mirror image, we
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    have the hydrogen in back,
    chlorine in front.
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    Same there.
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    So far, it's looking like
    a mirror image.
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    And then in this last carbon
    over here, chlorine in front,
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    hydrogen in back.
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    But here, we have chlorine in
    the back, hydrogen in front.
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    So this part, you could
    think of it this way.
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    This is the mirror image of
    this, this is the mirror image
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    of this part, but this is not
    the mirror image of that part.
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    So when you have a stereoisomer
    that is not a
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    mirror, when you have two
    stereoisomers that aren't
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    mirror images of each other,
    we call them diastereomers.
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    I always have trouble
    saying that.
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    Let me write it.
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    These are diastereomers, which
    is essentially saying it's a
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    stereoisomer that is
    not an enantiomer.
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    That's all it means: a
    stereoisomer, not an
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    enantiomer.
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    A stereoisomer's either going
    to be an enantiomer or a
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    diastereomer.
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    Now, let's do this last one.
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    Let's see we have two-- we have
    this cyclohexane ring,
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    and they have a bromo on the
    number one and the number two
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    group, depending how
    you think about it.
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    It looks like they are mirror
    images of each other.
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    We could put a mirror right
    there, and they definitely
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    look like mirror images.
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    And this is a chiral
    carbon here.
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    It's bonded to one carbon group
    that is different than
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    this carbon group.
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    This carbon group
    has a bromine.
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    This carbon group doesn't.
  • 11:24 - 11:26
    It just has a bunch of hydrogens
    on it, if you kind
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    of go in that direction.
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    And it's hydrogen and then a
    bromine, so that is chiral.
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    And then, same argument,
    that is also chiral.
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    And obviously, this one is
    chiral and that is chiral.
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    But if you think about it, they
    are mirror images of each
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    other, and they each have
    two chiral centers
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    or two chiral carbons.
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    But if you think about it, all
    you have to do is flip this
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    guy over and you will
    get this molecule.
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    These are the same molecules.
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    So it is the same molecule.
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    So this is interesting, and we
    saw this when we first learned
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    about chirality.
  • 12:00 - 12:03
    Even though we have two chiral
    centers, this is
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    not a chiral molecule.
  • 12:05 - 12:07
    It is the same thing as
    its mirror image.
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    It is superimposable on
    its mirror image.
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    It is superimposable on
    its mirror image.
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    So even though it has chiral
    carbons in it, it is not a
  • 12:28 - 12:29
    chiral molecule.
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    And we call these
    meso compounds.
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    And we can point to one of them
    because they really are
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    the same compound.
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    This is a meso compound.
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    It has chiral centers.
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    It has chiral carbons, I
    guess you could say it.
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    But it is not a chiral
    compound.
  • 12:48 - 12:50
    And the way to spot these fairly
    straightforward is that
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    you have chiral centers,
    but there is a
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    line of symmetry here.
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    There's a line of symmetry
    right here.
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    These two sides of the compound
    are mirror images of
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    each other.
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    Now, these would not be the same
    molecule if I change that
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    to a fluorine and I change
    that to a fluorine.
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    Then all of a sudden, you do
    not have this symmetry.
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    These are mirror images,
    but they would not be
  • 13:14 - 13:15
    superimposable.
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    So if that was a fluorine,
    these would actually be
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    enantiomers.
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    And this would not be only one
    meso compound, it would be two
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    different enantiomers, and one
    of them would have an R
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    direction and one of them would
    have an S direction if
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    we go with the naming
    conventions that we learned.
Title:
Stereoisomers, Enantiomers, Diastereomers, Constitutional Isomers and Meso Compounds
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
13:36

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