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- Apr 5, 2013
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Hi,
I'm preparing to take my mcat in a few weeks and I have had some orgo/gen chem questions that I would like to get answered before my test day (I haven't had anyone to ask).
Please help me by answering one or more of these questions:
1. For sugars and amino acids, does the D configuration always mean that the compound rotates light clockwise? (I know D doesn't always signify the R stereochemistry but I'm just confused about the correlation of +/- rotation and D/L configuration)
2. For compounds with aromatic rings attached (ex: Diphenylmethanol - methanol with two benzene rings attached) - in this case, if the OH were protonated and acted as a leaving group resulting in a carbocation, will the rings make the C+ more stable? I'm confused because in compounds like phenol (benzene with OH directly attached), the aromatic ring draws electron density from the OH making the bond weaker and more acidic. Based on that logic, I would think that the rings in diphenylmethanol would draw more electron density away from the C+ making it MORE positive and unstable but my books says it will stabilize it.
3. For atomic orbitals, are electrons at a higher orbital at a higher energy or lower energy? In the Berkley review, it states that the energy of an orbital is proportional to 1/n (n=orbital number). This would make higher orbitals at a lower energy. But I always assumed higher orbitals were more unstable and more reactive. For example, in biology class we learn that photosynthesis pushes electrons to a higher energy level (failing to fill a lower energy level first like Hund's rule predicts).
4. Can meso compounds have unever chiral centers? A problem in the Berkley review orgo set seemed to suggest a 5 carbon sugar that was the configuration R, R, S and R,S,S for carbons 2,3, and 4 respectively were meso regardless of the configuration of the middle carbon (carbon 3). I always thought I learned that meso compounds have to have an even number of chiral centers.
I appreciate any response even if it doesn't answer all the questions!
I'm preparing to take my mcat in a few weeks and I have had some orgo/gen chem questions that I would like to get answered before my test day (I haven't had anyone to ask).
Please help me by answering one or more of these questions:
1. For sugars and amino acids, does the D configuration always mean that the compound rotates light clockwise? (I know D doesn't always signify the R stereochemistry but I'm just confused about the correlation of +/- rotation and D/L configuration)
2. For compounds with aromatic rings attached (ex: Diphenylmethanol - methanol with two benzene rings attached) - in this case, if the OH were protonated and acted as a leaving group resulting in a carbocation, will the rings make the C+ more stable? I'm confused because in compounds like phenol (benzene with OH directly attached), the aromatic ring draws electron density from the OH making the bond weaker and more acidic. Based on that logic, I would think that the rings in diphenylmethanol would draw more electron density away from the C+ making it MORE positive and unstable but my books says it will stabilize it.
3. For atomic orbitals, are electrons at a higher orbital at a higher energy or lower energy? In the Berkley review, it states that the energy of an orbital is proportional to 1/n (n=orbital number). This would make higher orbitals at a lower energy. But I always assumed higher orbitals were more unstable and more reactive. For example, in biology class we learn that photosynthesis pushes electrons to a higher energy level (failing to fill a lower energy level first like Hund's rule predicts).
4. Can meso compounds have unever chiral centers? A problem in the Berkley review orgo set seemed to suggest a 5 carbon sugar that was the configuration R, R, S and R,S,S for carbons 2,3, and 4 respectively were meso regardless of the configuration of the middle carbon (carbon 3). I always thought I learned that meso compounds have to have an even number of chiral centers.
I appreciate any response even if it doesn't answer all the questions!