O.Chem question

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meant2be10

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Some of the ochem answer choices will have (+/-), I understand this referes to the direction plane polarized light is rotated, however I don't know when you should chose the an answer with (+/-) over the same answer choice without it. Anyone know a simple way of explaining this?
 
+ / - means enantiomers I believe so anything that makes enantiomers would be your reasoning for choosing a + / - answer aka think Sn1. Remember Sn1 gives two enantiomers usually in a racemic mixture (optically inactive) both the + and minus enantiomers. I think thats how it works? Anyone else?
 
Sn2 reactions occur with inversion of configuration so they wouldn't produce enantiomers. Elimination reactions would get rid of the steteocenter so again no enantiomers. In a sn1 reaction a carbocation is produced so the nucleophile can attack from both sides, producing a anemic mixture of enantiomers that's not optically active. Since both configurations are optically active (r and s) this means that one will have a + charge and the other will have a - charge, since the overall charge has to cancel out in the anemic mixture. I hope that was clear enough.

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and by anemic I meant racemic. I hate t9

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Some of the ochem answer choices will have (+/-), I understand this referes to the direction plane polarized light is rotated, however I don't know when you should chose the an answer with (+/-) over the same answer choice without it. Anyone know a simple way of explaining this?

Just to clarify:
the prefix (+)- indicates a single enantiomer which rotates plane polarized light to the right.
the prefix (–)-indicates a single enantiomer which rotates plane polarized light to the left.
the prefix (+/–) indicates a racemic mixture.

It will come up the most during SN1/SN2 questions.
Since the SN2 is stereospecific, if you start with, say, (+)-2-bromobutane and are asked to say what the product will be in the reaction with NaOH, you would choose 2-butanol with the (+) or (-) designation in front of it, indicating a single enantiomer.

If you have an SN1 reaction which uses a pure enantiomer as starting material, your product will have the designation (+/-) indicating a racemic mixture.

If the molecule is achiral, of course, the terminology is unnecessary.

Hope this helps - James
 
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