ExceptionsHaving two chiral centers may give a meso compound which is achiral. Certain configurations may not exist due to steric reasons. Cyclic compounds with chiral centers may not exhibit chirality due to the presence of a two-fold rotation axis. Planar chirality may also provide for chirality without having an actual chiral center present. Chiral carbonA chiral carbon is a carbon atom which is asymmetric. Having a chiral carbon is usually a prerequisite for a molecule to have chirality, though the presence of a chiral carbon does not necessarily make a molecule chiral. A chiral carbon is often denoted by C*. For the carbon to be chiral, it follows that:
Almost any other configuration for the carbon would produce a center of symmetry. For example, an sp or sp2 hybridized molecule would be planar, with a mirror plane. Two identical groups would give a mirror plane bisecting the molecule. The exceptions, probably due to the form of chirality exhibited (Axial chirality), are hardly ever mentioned in normal-level discussions on strereochemistry and form two groups:
Other chiral centersChirality is not limited to carbon atoms, though carbon atoms are often centers of chirality due to its ubiquity in organic chemistry. Nitrogen and phosphorus atoms are also tetrahedral. Racemization by Walden inversion may be restricted (such as ammonium or phosphonium cations), or slow. This allows the presence of chirality. Metal atoms with tetrahedral or octahedral geometries may also be chiral due to having different ligands. For the octahedral case, several chiralities are possible. Having three ligands of two types, the ligands may be lined up along the meridian, giving the mer-isomer, or forming a face — the fac isomer. Having three bidentate ligands of only one type gives a propeller-type structure, with two different enantiomers denoted Λ and Δ. References
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