enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Epimer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epimer

    In stereochemistry, an epimer is one of a pair of diastereomers. [1] The two epimers have opposite configuration at only one stereogenic center out of at least two. [2] All other stereogenic centers in the molecules are the same in each. Epimerization is the interconversion of one epimer to the other epimer.

  3. Glyceraldehyde - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glyceraldehyde

    Glyceraldehyde has one chiral center and therefore exists as two different enantiomers with opposite optical rotation: . In the D/L nomenclature, either D from Latin Dexter meaning "right", or L from Latin Laevo meaning "left"

  4. Chiral drugs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiral_drugs

    Louis Pasteur - pioneering stereochemist. Chirality can be traced back to 1812, when physicist Jean-Baptiste Biot found out about a phenomenon called "optical activity." [10] Louis Pasteur, a famous student of Biot's, made a series of observations that led him to suggest that the optical activity of some substances is caused by their molecular asymmetry, which makes nonsuperimposable mirror ...

  5. Chirality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirality

    The naturally occurring plant form of alpha-tocopherol is RRR-α-tocopherol whereas the synthetic form (all-racemic vitamin E, or dl-tocopherol) is equal parts of the stereoisomers RRR, RRS, RSS, SSS, RSR, SRS, SRR, and SSR with progressively decreasing biological equivalency, so that 1.36 mg of dl-tocopherol is considered equivalent to 1.0 mg ...

  6. Stereocenter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereocenter

    In stereochemistry, a stereocenter of a molecule is an atom (center), axis or plane that is the focus of stereoisomerism; that is, when having at least three different groups bound to the stereocenter, interchanging any two different groups creates a new stereoisomer. [1] [2] Stereocenters are also referred to as stereogenic centers.

  7. Chirality (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirality_(chemistry)

    An example of a molecule that does not have a mirror plane or an inversion and yet would be considered achiral is 1,1-difluoro-2,2-dichlorocyclohexane (or 1,1-difluoro-3,3-dichlorocyclohexane). This may exist in many conformers ( conformational isomers ), but none of them has a mirror plane.

  8. Can Microneedling Actually Prevent Hair Loss? - AOL

    www.aol.com/microneedling-actually-prevent-hair...

    Hair loss in men is common, and a quick Google search reveals all sorts of options for reducing and reversing thinning hair — topical minoxidil, hair transplant surgery, serums, and even ...

  9. Racemic mixture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racemic_mixture

    One of the first such racemates studied, by Pasteur in 1853, forms from a 1:2 mixture of the bis ammonium salt of (+)-tartaric acid and the bis ammonium salt of (−)-malic acid in water. Re-investigated in 2008, [ 9 ] the crystals formed are dumbbell -shape with the central part consisting of ammonium (+)-bitartrate, whereas the outer parts ...