Conformational isomerism is a form of isomerism and describes the phenomenon of molecules with the same structural formula having different chemical conformations or conformers due to atoms rotating about a bond. Steric repulsion will make some conformers more favourable than others - i.e. they will have a lower energy level. Different conformers can interconvert by rotation around single bonds, without breaking chemical bonds. A simplified example is that of a butane molecule viewed in the Newman projection shown - i.e. as if viewed down the central C-C bond with relative rotations of C2 and C3 illustrated. Rotamers are a set of conformers and the rotation barrier is the activation energy required to jump from one conformer to another conformer. The population of different conformers follows a Boltzmann distribution:
The subscript i and j represent the highest and lowest energy. g is the number of conformations found at that particular energy, the degeneracy. N is the population of molecules in a particular conformation.
Two important forms of conformational isomerism exist in linear alkane conformations with staggered, eclipsed and gauche conformers and cyclohexane conformations with chair and boat conformers. Another example of conformational isomerism is protein folding, where some shapes are stable and functional, but others are not. Conformational isomerism is also found in atropisomers.
Stereochemistry | Chemical compounds | Organic chemistry
تزامر تشكلي | Konformation | Conformation | Conformatie | Konformacja | Konformation
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"Conformational isomerism".
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