Chemistry, asked by shashmitharao, 1 year ago

explain about optical isomerism​

Answers

Answered by kamalchem1980
1

Explanation:

Optical isomers are two compounds which contain the same number and kinds of atoms, and bonds (i.e., the connectivity between atoms is the same), and different spatial arrangements of the atoms, but which have non-superimposable mirror images. Each non-superimposable mirror image structure is called an enantiomer.

Answered by jkrishnamohan6
0

Answer:

if the compound contains a chiral carbon. Optical isomers are two compounds which contain the same number and kinds of atoms, and bonds (i.e., the connectivity between atoms is the same), and different spatial arrangements of the atoms, but which have non-superimposable mirror images. Each non-superimposable mirror image structure is called an enantiomer.

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