Chemistry, asked by Hooriya300, 1 month ago

Is it necessary to have same group on opposite side of double bond in trans isomers, like can there be any other group opposite of Hydrogen other than hydrogen ?​

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Answered by YeaImYoutubChrizzone
1

Answer:

These isomers arise because of the possibility of branching in carbon chains. For example, there are two isomers of butane. Be careful not to draw “false” isomers which are just twisted versions of the original molecule. For example, this structure is just the straight chain version of butane rotated about the central carbon-carbon bond.

Explanation:

Geometric isomerism is a form of stereoisomerism. This page explains what stereoisomers are and how you recognize the possibility of geometric isomers in a molecule. There are also endless other possible ways that this molecule could twist itself. There is almost completely free rotation around all the carbon-carbon single bonds. If you had a model of a molecule in front of you, you would have to take it to pieces and rebuild it if you wanted to make an isomer of that molecule.

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