enantiomerek
Enantiomerek, or enantiomers, are pairs of stereoisomers that are non-superimposable mirror images of one another. They occur when a molecule contains at least one stereogenic center, most often a carbon atom bonded to four different substituents, or other elements of chirality such as axial chirality. The two forms cannot be superimposed by any rotation in three-dimensional space. Because of this, enantiomers can behave very differently in chiral environments.
In achiral environments, enantiomers have identical physical properties, including boiling and melting points, density, and solubility.
Enantiomers often exhibit different biological and pharmacological activities because many biomolecules are chiral and differentiate between
Methods to obtain or separate enantiomers include chiral resolution (for example by forming diastereomeric salts), catalytic
Enantiomerek are a fundamental concept in chemistry and biochemistry, reflecting how molecular handedness influences interactions with