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I don't know what it is, but apparently I've forgotten the super basic stuff from 4 years ago.
Can someone explain to me why enantiomers can't be considered conformational isomers? I understand the definitions (conformational isomers can be turned into one another by rotating around a sigma bond without breaking the bond; configurational isomers need to break a bond to make them look alike), but when I look at examples like:
I mean, you can definitely rotate the top half of #2 to the right and get it to look exactly like number one. So why are they configurational instead of conformational isomers?
Can someone explain to me why enantiomers can't be considered conformational isomers? I understand the definitions (conformational isomers can be turned into one another by rotating around a sigma bond without breaking the bond; configurational isomers need to break a bond to make them look alike), but when I look at examples like:

I mean, you can definitely rotate the top half of #2 to the right and get it to look exactly like number one. So why are they configurational instead of conformational isomers?