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I was thinking about this now and realized that I don't know the answer.
I was under the impression that the presence of "different substituents caused like to bend about the molecule."
But considering GLYCINE is not optically active (has 3 different kinds of subs)
upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2c/Glycine-3D-balls.png
But a Chiral center is optically active (has only 2 different kinds of subs)
http://chm233.asu.edu/notes/chirality/chirality_files/image090.png
How exactly does the "ability to be superimposable" allow a molecule to be optically active? Especially considering working with just one enantiomer.
I was under the impression that the presence of "different substituents caused like to bend about the molecule."
But considering GLYCINE is not optically active (has 3 different kinds of subs)
upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2c/Glycine-3D-balls.png
But a Chiral center is optically active (has only 2 different kinds of subs)
http://chm233.asu.edu/notes/chirality/chirality_files/image090.png
How exactly does the "ability to be superimposable" allow a molecule to be optically active? Especially considering working with just one enantiomer.