Chemistry, asked by zaidbhatt26, 8 months ago

explain chirality in allenes? give examples​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Any molecule of low enough symmetry to lack a mirror plane is chiral. ... The central carbon atom in low symmetryallenes serves this purpose. This is also an example of axial chirality, which is chirality about an axis (the C=C=C axis) instead of about a point (which is point chirality — the more familiar kind).

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Answered by LEGEND778
0

Answer:

Any molecule of low enough symmetry to lack a mirror plane is chiral. Similarly, stereogenic centers need not be carbon atoms (or any atoms), they just need to be a point in the molecule's space which generates chirality for the molecule. The central carbon atom in low symmetry allenes serves this purpose.

Explanation:

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