Racemates & Optical Activity (Edexcel International A Level Chemistry): Revision Note
Racemates & Optical Activity
Properties of optical isomers
The chemical properties of optical isomers are generally identical, with one exception
Optical isomers interact with biological sensors in different ways
For example, one enantiomer of carvone smells of spearmint, while the other smells of caraway
Carvone optical isomers have distinctive smells
Optical isomers have identical physical properties, with one exception
Isomers differ in their ability to rotate the plane of polarised light
When unpolarised light is passed through a polariser, the light becomes polarised as the waves will vibrate in one plane only
The major difference between the two enantiomers is:
One enantiomer rotates plane polarised light in a clockwise manner and the other in an anticlockwise fashion
A common way to differentiate the isomers is to use (+) and (-), but there are other systems using d and l, D and L, or R and S
The rotation of plane polarised light can be used to determine the identity of an optical isomer of a single substance
For example, pass plane polarised light through a sample containing one of the two optical isomers of a single substance
Depending on which isomer the sample contains, the plane of polarised light will be rotated either clockwise or anti-clockwise by a fixed number of degrees
Each enantiomer rotates the plane of polarised light in a different direction
A racemic mixture (or racemate) is a mixture containing equal amounts of each enantiomer
One enantiomer rotates light clockwise, the other rotates light anticlockwise
A racemic mixture is optically inactive as the enantiomers will cancel out each others effect
This means that the plane of polarised light will not change
Racemic mixtures are optically inactive
Racemic mixtures and drugs
In the pharmaceutical industry, it is much easier to produce synthetic drugs that are racemic mixtures than producing one enantiomer of the drug
Around 56% of all drugs in use are chiral and of those 88% are sold as racemic mixtures
Separating the enantiomers gives a compound that is described as enantiopure, it contains only one enantiomer
This separation process is very expensive and time consuming, so for many drugs it is not worthwhile, even though only half the of the drug is pharmacologically active
For example, the pain reliever ibuprofen is sold as a racemic mixture
The structure of ibuprofen showing the chiral carbon that is responsible for the racemic mixture produced in the synthesis of the drug
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