
V Using Models of Compounds with Two Chiral Centers 25. On your drawing, use arrows to...
glceraldehyde molecule
glyceraldehyde molecule
IV. Using Models of Compounds with One Chiral Center 17. Use your model kit to construct a model of the glyceraldehyde molecule, as shown in Figure 3. Start by constructing a model of methane. Replace one hy- drogen with the hydroxyl group (OH), another hydro- gen with CH2OH, and a third hydrogen with CHO. On your Data Sheet, draw a picture of your ball-and-stick model next to the structural formula of the molecule (25) OH H...
I got question #27 wrong. Can you please explain.
e correct answer: (only one) many chiral carbon atoms are in the following molecule (A) 3 B) 4 (C)3 2 (E) 21. How many chiral carbon atoms are in the following malceale? (A) 5 (B) 4 (C) 3 (D) 2 ) 007- O HOM han 22. How many chiral carbon atoms are in the following molecule (A) 5 (B) 4 (C)3 (D) 2 23. Ilow many chiral carbon atoms are in...
4,5,6
4. (1 pt.) Name the following compounds. Assign R S for chiral center and use E Z to describe double bond. 5. (1 pt.) How many tetrahedral stereocenters (chiral centers) are there in the molecule shown below. Mark each one with an asterisk. B. How many configurational isomers total are possible for this structure? A Number of tetrahedral stereocenters B. Total number of configurational isomers 6. (1 pt.) Identify all molecules that are chiral and the ones that are...
1. Construct a model that has a central carbon atom with 4 different colored spheres attached to it, representing four different atoms or groups. Draw a solid/dashed-wedge structure of this model here and answer the following questions. ç (a blue ball) IND Fig. 1 B a. Does the model have a plane of symmetry? Yes No The central carbon is said to be a stereocenter, stereogenic center, or chiral carbon. Change one of the colored spheres so that two of...
Questions 7-15 The molecule is ethane
71 2 O ACTIVITY 1.2.1 Biological Macromolecules in 3-D 7. Orient the two molecules so that portions of the mo lecules that would normally form intermolecular bonds lie next to each other. In this activity, you will build molecular models of biologically important molecules using ball-and-spring molecular model 1) What intermolecular forces help to hold these mo- building kits and then you will view these and other molecules lecules together! of interest using computer-generated...
please help
The dehydration of alcohols Under acidic conditions, alcohols will undergo a dehydration reaction, producing an alkene and water. During the reaction, the hydroxyl group of the alcohol and a hydrogen atom from an adjacent carbon atom are lost. The reaction takes place in three steps, as shown in the diagram. (Figure 1) In the first step, a hydrogen lon bonds to the hydroxyl group of the alcohol. In the second step, the protonated hydroxl group leaves the compound,...
19-26 thanks!
19-29*
PART 3: 2,3-BUTANEDIOL CH-CH(OH)-CH(OH)-CH, mirror images, not superimposable Build as many models of 2,3-butanediol as you can. First, attach two carbons with a single bond. To each carbon add one carbon, one hydrogen, and one oxygen. To complete the structure, Ti the remaining hydrogen atoms. Remember, a model is not different if it is completely superimposable on one already constructed! 13. How many stereochemically different models are possible for 2,3-butanediol? 14. What characteristic does one of these...
3. Diastereomers and Meso Forms. When a molecule has two or more stereogenic centers, stereoisomers that are not mirror images can exist; these are called diastereoisomers. Within this general class, there are special types of stereoisomers that are always optically inactive and are called meso forms. Construct a model with four different colored balls about a carbon center. Construct another identical to the first and verify this by the superimposition test. Now remove the same colored balls, blue (C from...
Week 10- Constitutional isomers Constitutional isomers have the same molecular formula, but their atoms are bonded in different orders. These may be further distinguished as chain isomers, which differ only in hydrocarbon chain structure, positional isomers, which differ in the location of a functional group, and functional group isomers which differ in the nature of their functional groups. Typically chain and position isomers show only modest differences in their physical and chemical properties, while functional group isomers differ greatly from...
____ 1. The diagram below represents serine, a polar, uncharged
amino acid. Which functional group gives serine its
distinct property?
a. H3
b. CH2OH
c. –H
d. COO–
____ 2. The monomers shown below are monomers for which of the
following natural polymers?
a. polysaccharides
b. plastics
c. DNA
d. proteins
____ 3. Which of the following processes illustrates the production
of a protein?
a. specific code for amino acids --> amino acid chain -->
gene --> DNA --> specific...