Why is it only chiral molecules that rotate plane polarized light?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the relationship between molecular structure and optical activity, specifically addressing why achiral molecules do not rotate plane polarized light despite having electron clouds. It highlights that while all molecules can scatter light, optical activity is primarily a property of chiral molecules. The conversation references a review by Bart Kahr, which argues that the conventional link between optical activity and enantiomorphism is misleading. It notes that certain non-enantiomorphous point groups can exhibit optical activity under specific conditions, but this concept has not gained significant traction in the field of molecular chirality. Ultimately, the consensus is that optical rotation occurs in macroscopic samples of chiral molecules, while isotropic samples of achiral substances do not exhibit this property, regardless of their electron cloud shape.
CrimpJiggler
Messages
141
Reaction score
1
I just read that the reason molecules rotate plane polarized light is because the light interacts with the electron cloud of the molecule. That makes sense but why aren't achiral molecules optically active? Achiral molecules have electron clouds too so why don't their electron clouds cause optical rotation? As an example, let's say a 2 carbon alkene with 4 different substituents i.e. 1,1-hydroxychloro-2,2-iodoaminoethylene. This molecule is achiral but it has an irregular shaped electron cloud so why doesn't plane polarized light rotate when it interacts with that irregular shaped electron cloud?
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
See, for example, this review from Bart Kahr (now at NYU):

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.200704559

Some relevant quote mining...

Unfortunately, the link between optical activity and enantiomorphism is not only introduced early and reinforced relentlessly in a chemist's education, it is wrong.

It is well-known to some that oriented systems belonging to some non-enantiomorphous point groups will indeed be optically active for some directions of incident light, but this fact, albeit qualified, has failed to make substantive inroads in the science of molecular chirality...

Anyway, there are a bunch more details - as well as how to determine whether an achiral molecule would be optically active - in the review, as well as a look back through the literature on this topic up until 2008.
 
You are right, every molecule scatters light and may also rotate the polarization, however what one usually calls optical activity is a property not of a single molecule but of a macroscopic sample of molecules. So even if a single molecule can do all kinds of sort of scattering to a photon, an isotropic sample of some substance or solution will only rotate the polarization of a macroscopic amount of photons if the molecules are chiral.
 
I want to test a humidity sensor with one or more saturated salt solutions. The table salt that I have on hand contains one of two anticaking agents, calcium silicate or sodium aluminosilicate. Will the presence of either of these additives (or iodine for that matter) significantly affect the equilibrium humidity? I searched and all the how-to-do-it guides did not address this question. One research paper I found reported that at 1.5% w/w calcium silicate increased the deliquescent point by...
I'm trying to find a cheap DIY method to etch holes of various shapes through 0.3mm Aluminium sheet using 5-10% Sodium Hydroxide. The idea is to apply a resist to the Aluminium then selectively ablate it off using a diode laser cutter and then dissolve away the Aluminium using Sodium Hydroxide. By cheap I mean resists costing say £20 in small quantities. The Internet has suggested various resists to try including... Enamel paint (only survived seconds in the NaOH!) Acrylic paint (only...
Back
Top