Dictionary Definition
isomerism n : the state of being an isomer; the
complex of chemical and physical phenomena characteristic of
isomers
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
isomerism- the phenomenon of the existence of isomers - the existence of different substances with the same molecular formulae
Extensive Definition
- This article is about the chemical concept. For "isomerism" of atomic nuclei, see nuclear isomer.
In chemistry, isomers are
compounds with the same molecular
formula but different structural
formulae Isomers do not necessarily share similar properties
unless they also have the same functional
groups. This should not be confused with a nuclear
isomer, which involves a nucleus at different states of
excitement. There are many different classes of isomers, like
stereoisomers, enantiomers, geometrical isomers, et cetera (see
graph below).
A simple example of isomerism is given by
propanol: it has the
formula C3H8O (or C3H7OH) and occurs as
two isomers: propan-1-ol
(n-propyl alcohol; I) and propan-2-ol
(isopropyl alcohol; II)
Note that the position of the oxygen atom differs between the
two: it is attached to an end carbon in the first isomer, and
to the center carbon in the second.
There is, however, another isomer of C3H8O which has
significantly different properties: methoxyethane
(methyl-ethyl-ether; III). Unlike the isomers of propanol,
methoxyethane has an oxygen atom that is connected to two carbons
rather than to one carbon and one hydrogen. This makes it an
ether, not an alcohol, as
it lacks a hydroxyl
group, and has chemical properties more similar to other ethers
than to either of the above alcohol isomers.
An example of isomers having more subtly
different properties can be found in certain xanthines. Theobromine,
found in chocolate, is
a vasodilator with
some effects in common with caffeine, but if one of the two
methyl groups is moved to
a different position on the two-ring core, the isomer is theophylline, which has a
variety of effects, including bronchodilation and
anti-inflammatory
action.
Allene and propyne are
examples of isomers containing different bond types. Allene
contains two double
bonds, while propyne contains one triple
bond.
Classification
There are two main forms of isomerism: structural
isomerism and stereoisomerism.
In structural isomers, the atoms and functional
groups are joined together in different ways, as in the example
of propyl alcohol above. This group includes chain isomerism
whereby hydrocarbon
chains have variable amounts of branching; position isomerism which
deals with the position of a functional group on a chain; and
functional group isomerism in which one functional group is split
up into different ones.
In stereoisomers the bond structure is the same,
but the geometrical positioning of atoms and functional groups in
space differs. This class includes enantiomers where different
isomers are non-superimposable mirror-images of each other, and
diastereomers when
they are not. Diastereomerism is again subdivided into conformational
isomerism (conformers) when isomers can interconvert by
chemical bond rotations and cis-trans
isomerism when this is not possible. Note that although
conformers can be referred to as having a diastereomeric
relationship, the isomers over all are not diastereomers, since
bonds in conformers can be rotated to make them mirror
images.
In skeletal isomers the main carbon chain is
different between the two isomers. This type of isomerism is most
identifiable in secondary and tertiary alcohol isomers.
Tautomers are
structural isomers of the same chemical substance that
spontaneously interconvert with each other, even when pure. They
have different chemical properties, and consequently, distinct
reactions characteristic to each form are observed. If the
interconversion reaction is fast enough, tautomers cannot be
isolated from each other. An example is when they differ by the
position of a proton, such as in keto/enol tautomerism, where the
proton is alternately on the carbon or oxygen.
In food
chemistry, medicinal
chemistry and biochemistry, cis-trans
isomerism is always considered. In medicinal
chemistry and biochemistry, enantiomers are of particular
interest since most changes in these types of isomers are now known
to be meaningful in living organisms. Pharmaceutical and academic
researchers have found chromatographical methods
to reliably separate these from each other. On an industrial scale,
however, these methods are rather costly and are mostly used to
filter out the potentially harmful or biologically inactive
enantiomer.
While structural isomers typically have different
chemical properties, stereoisomers behave identically in most
chemical reactions, except in their reaction with other
stereoisomers. Enzymes however can
distinguish between different enantiomers of a compound, and
organisms often prefer one isomer over the other. Some
stereoisomers also differ in the way they rotate polarized
light.
Other types of isomerism exist outside this
scope. Topological
isomers called topoisomers are generally
large molecules that wind about and form different shaped knots or
loops. Molecules with topoisomers include catenanes and DNA. Topoisomerase
enzymes can knot DNA and thus change its topology. There are also
isotopomers or
isotopic isomers that
have the same numbers of each type of isotopic substitution but in
chemically different positions. In nuclear
physics, nuclear
isomers are excited states of atomic nuclei. Spin
isomers have differing distributions of spin among
their constituent atoms.
History
Isomerism was first noticed in 1827, when Friedrich Woehler prepared cyanic acid and noted that although its elemental composition was identical to fulminic acid (prepared by Justus von Liebig the previous year), its properties were quite different. This finding challenged the prevailing chemical understanding of the time, which held that chemical compounds could be different only when they had different elemental compositions. After additional discoveries of the same sort were made, such as Woehler's 1828 discovery that urea had the same atomic composition as the chemically distinct ammonium cyanate, Jöns Jakob Berzelius introduced the term isomerism to describe the phenomenon.In 1849, Louis
Pasteur separated tiny crystals of tartaric
acid into their two mirror-image
forms. The individual molecules of each were the left and right
optical stereoisomers, solutions of
which rotate the plane of polarized light in opposite
directions.
References
isomerism in Arabic: متماكب
isomerism in Bosnian: Izomeri
isomerism in Bulgarian: Изомерия
isomerism in Czech: Izomerie
isomerism in Welsh: Isomer
isomerism in Danish: Isomer
isomerism in German: Isomer
isomerism in Estonian: Isomeerid
isomerism in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ισομέρεια
isomerism in Spanish: Isomería
isomerism in Esperanto: Izomero
isomerism in French: Isomérie
isomerism in Korean: 이성질체
isomerism in Croatian: Izomer
isomerism in Indonesian: Isomer
isomerism in Italian: Isomeria
isomerism in Hebrew: איזומר
isomerism in Latvian: Izomēri
isomerism in Hungarian: Izomer
isomerism in Macedonian: Изомерија
isomerism in Malay (macrolanguage): Isomer
isomerism in Dutch: Isomeer
isomerism in Japanese: 異性体
isomerism in Norwegian: Isomeri
isomerism in Occitan (post 1500): Isomeria
isomerism in Polish: Izomeria
isomerism in Portuguese: Isomerismo
isomerism in Russian: Изомерия
isomerism in Albanian: Izomeri
isomerism in Slovak: Izoméria
isomerism in Slovenian: Izomer
isomerism in Serbian: Изомер (хемијски)
isomerism in Finnish: Isomeria
isomerism in Swedish: Isomeri
isomerism in Vietnamese: Đồng phân
isomerism in Turkish: İzomer
isomerism in Ukrainian: Ізомери
isomerism in Chinese: 同分异构体