floodgate
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2007
- Messages
- 48
First off, I'm not sure this is the right board for this, but it fit my thread's concept best in my opinion. Feel free to move it if it is out of place.
Also, I don't claim to know much more than the average person about chemistry, so please excuse me if my questions are obvious or don't make much sense.
Anyways, correct me if I'm wrong, please.
I often hear about different isomers of the same chemical. For example,Levo-methamphetamine and Dextro-methamphetamine, where there levo is the left side of the compound, and dextro is the right side. I will be using methamphetamine for most of my questions simply because I've read the most about it in regards to isomers. Racemic mixtures contain both levo- and dextro- forms of the compound. In psychotropic applications, -levo isomers of a certain substance are known to usually last longer, and -dextro isomer forms of the same substance are known to require a lower dose and have stronger effects.
Here come the questions:
-If levo and dextro refer to the "direction" of a single molecule, then must EVERY molecule that is able( chiral?) to have a "right and a left form" be either levo or dextro? So would any single random methamphetamine molecule HAVE to be one or the other (levo-methamphetamine or dextro-methamphetamine)?
-Are most substances of -levo and -dextro form? I was reading about chirality and from what I've read, achiral molecules are achiral when they have an "improper rotation". Is the rotation of a molecule dependent on properties of that specific molecule, or properties of the general chemical it is. For example, could a molecule of methamphetamine have it's rotation become improper? If so, does this happen in normal situations? or is it a rare occurrence that is not commonly observed in every day chemistry. What is the correct terminology for specifically declaring an achiral compound? (like, "neutral-methamphetamine" )
-Is it known what determines the levo/dextro ratio of a resulting chemical after a chemical reaction that produces a chiral compound? Is it dependent on the specific reaction that results in the final compound? Or is it determined primarily by other things such as the properties of the compound being formed or by variables such as temperature, light, and humidity
-Do the dextro/levo forms of a compound react the same (or at least similarly enough) to all chemical reactions that would normally be plausible with any given chemical? For example, if I had some (I'm not sure if these compounds make sense, but try to understand it hypothetically
) pure "levo-acetic acid"(or pure dextro-acetic acid) and normal, from the store (racemic?) sodium bicarbonate, and mixed them together in the famous baking soda and vinegar acid-base reaction, would it still yield sodium acetate and carbonic acid ( which then decomposes to water and carbon dioxide)? If so, would the reaction happen at the same speed? Are there specific reactions that are significantly different when compounds are levo/dextro/racemic?
-Would a 90/10 percent mixture of levo and dextro isomers of a compound that underwent a chemical change with 100% yield result in a 90/10 percent ratio of levo- and dextro- in the resulting substance? If so, would a pure levo-(or dextro) substance that underwent the same chemical change yield a pure levo-(or dextro) substance?
-Are there general methods to convert a dextro- substance to levo-, or the other way around? Are there general methods to convert a isomer mixture with a much higher levo- or dextro- ratio to it's counterpart to a mixture that was closer to 50/50? If there are no general methods, are there specific methods that have been established to work well for certain types of compounds? Where can I find examples of some of these methods?
Too much writing for now, I'm starting to confuse myself. I know some of my questions are probably horribly stated and amateur-ish, but I'm trying to learn and -any- input or help or sources to study would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you very much,
-f l o o d g a t e -
Also, I don't claim to know much more than the average person about chemistry, so please excuse me if my questions are obvious or don't make much sense.
Anyways, correct me if I'm wrong, please.
I often hear about different isomers of the same chemical. For example,Levo-methamphetamine and Dextro-methamphetamine, where there levo is the left side of the compound, and dextro is the right side. I will be using methamphetamine for most of my questions simply because I've read the most about it in regards to isomers. Racemic mixtures contain both levo- and dextro- forms of the compound. In psychotropic applications, -levo isomers of a certain substance are known to usually last longer, and -dextro isomer forms of the same substance are known to require a lower dose and have stronger effects.
Here come the questions:
-If levo and dextro refer to the "direction" of a single molecule, then must EVERY molecule that is able( chiral?) to have a "right and a left form" be either levo or dextro? So would any single random methamphetamine molecule HAVE to be one or the other (levo-methamphetamine or dextro-methamphetamine)?
-Are most substances of -levo and -dextro form? I was reading about chirality and from what I've read, achiral molecules are achiral when they have an "improper rotation". Is the rotation of a molecule dependent on properties of that specific molecule, or properties of the general chemical it is. For example, could a molecule of methamphetamine have it's rotation become improper? If so, does this happen in normal situations? or is it a rare occurrence that is not commonly observed in every day chemistry. What is the correct terminology for specifically declaring an achiral compound? (like, "neutral-methamphetamine" )
-Is it known what determines the levo/dextro ratio of a resulting chemical after a chemical reaction that produces a chiral compound? Is it dependent on the specific reaction that results in the final compound? Or is it determined primarily by other things such as the properties of the compound being formed or by variables such as temperature, light, and humidity
-Do the dextro/levo forms of a compound react the same (or at least similarly enough) to all chemical reactions that would normally be plausible with any given chemical? For example, if I had some (I'm not sure if these compounds make sense, but try to understand it hypothetically
-Would a 90/10 percent mixture of levo and dextro isomers of a compound that underwent a chemical change with 100% yield result in a 90/10 percent ratio of levo- and dextro- in the resulting substance? If so, would a pure levo-(or dextro) substance that underwent the same chemical change yield a pure levo-(or dextro) substance?
-Are there general methods to convert a dextro- substance to levo-, or the other way around? Are there general methods to convert a isomer mixture with a much higher levo- or dextro- ratio to it's counterpart to a mixture that was closer to 50/50? If there are no general methods, are there specific methods that have been established to work well for certain types of compounds? Where can I find examples of some of these methods?
Too much writing for now, I'm starting to confuse myself. I know some of my questions are probably horribly stated and amateur-ish, but I'm trying to learn and -any- input or help or sources to study would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you very much,
-f l o o d g a t e -
