Question:

Explain optical activity, chirality, retention, inversion and racemisation in Haloalkane.

Show Hint

- $S_N2$ $\Rightarrow$ inversion of configuration.
- $S_N1$ $\Rightarrow$ racemisation (mixture of retention + inversion).
- Optical activity arises only when a molecule has chirality (no plane of symmetry).
Updated On: Sep 3, 2025
Hide Solution
collegedunia
Verified By Collegedunia

Solution and Explanation


Optical activity:
A compound is said to be optically active if it can rotate the plane of plane-polarized light. Haloalkanes with a chiral carbon show optical activity.
Chirality:
A carbon atom bonded to four different groups is called a chiral carbon (asymmetric carbon). Such molecules exist in two non-superimposable mirror image forms (enantiomers).
Retention:
If during a reaction the spatial arrangement around the chiral carbon remains unchanged, the configuration is retained — this is called retention of configuration.
Inversion:
In $S_N2$ mechanism, the nucleophile attacks from the backside, opposite to the leaving group. This flips the configuration at the chiral carbon, called Walden inversion.
Racemisation:
In $S_N1$ mechanism, the planar carbocation formed can be attacked by the nucleophile from either side with equal probability. This gives a mixture of enantiomers (50:50), which is optically inactive due to mutual cancellation. This process is called racemisation.
Was this answer helpful?
0
0

Top Questions on Chemistry of organic compounds

View More Questions

Questions Asked in UP Board XII exam

View More Questions