| New Reply |
I don't understand why it's chiral. It's not like any of the phenyl |
Share Thread |
| Oct25-12, 09:40 PM | #1 |
|
|
I don't understand why it's chiral. It's not like any of the phenyl
I don't understand why it's chiral. It's not like any of the phenyl rings are stuck in a single resonance structure.
|
| Oct25-12, 11:00 PM | #2 |
|
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexaphenylbenzene
Take a look at the crystal structure. The phenyl groups are all angled the same way. If you turned them all the other way, the two structures would not be superimposable. The same concept is seen in left- and right-handed propellers (see picture). |
| Oct26-12, 02:39 AM | #3 |
|
Admin
|
According to the information on the wiki page hexaphenylbenzene is not chiral in the gas phase. My bet is that the propeller shaped molecule has lower volume and better contact surface and crystallizes easier - and once it starts to crystallize it just attracts other molecules in exactly the same conformation. But that's just a guess. |
| Oct26-12, 03:44 AM | #4 |
|
Recognitions:
|
I don't understand why it's chiral. It's not like any of the phenyl
Classical case of spontaneous symmetry breaking. Crystallization of SiO2 melts leads also either to D or L quartz.
|
| New Reply |