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Wood Chemistry PSE 406

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Wood Chemistry PSE 406 Lecture 2: Monosaccharides – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wood Chemistry PSE 406


1
Wood ChemistryPSE 406
  • Lecture 2
  • Monosaccharides

2
Why Study Monosaccharides?
  • As we discussed in lecture 1, wood carbohydrates
    (cellulose and hemicelluloses) are made of
    various sugars such as glucose, mannose, xylose,
    etc. In order to understand the properties and
    reactions of the carbohydrates, we need to
    understand monosaccharides.

D-glucose
3
What is a Monosaccharide?
  • Simple sugars
  • Monosaccharides are polyhydroxy aldehydes or
    ketones (aldoses or ketoses) of 3-9 carbons.
  • Polyhydroxy means that there is more than 1
    hydroxyl group (OH) on the carbon backbone.
  • Aldehydes and ketones both contain carbonyl
    groups.
  • Typically monosaccharides contain either 5 or 6
    carbons.

Aldehyde
Ketone
4
Glyceraldehyde
  • This 3 carbon sugar is the simplest
    monosaccharide.
  • It is an aldehyde.
  • As is the case with all monosaccharides, it
    contains an asymmetric or chiral carbon. This
    means there are 4 different groups attached to
    this carbon
  • Because of this, there are 2 different
    stereoisomers of this structure known as
    enantiomers.

5
Glyceraldehyde Representations
In this representation, the dotted lines
indicate bonds pointing back the wedges indicate
bonds pointing forward (a bear wants hug you).
In the Fischer representation, vertical lines
indicate bonds pointing back while horizontal
lines indicate bonds pointing forward..
Notes
6
3 D Views of the Enantiomers of Glyceraldehyde
L-Glyceraldehyde
D-Glyceraldehyde
7
Fisher projections
  • Using these rules the distinguishing features of
    the 3D structure of stereoisomers can easily and
    accurately represented with 2D drawings
  • Fischer projection named after Emil Fischer who
    established the molecular structures of many
    sugars

8
Four Carbon Sugars(Not Found in Hemicelluloses
or Cellulose)
  • With 2 chiral centers in the molecule, there are
    4 stereoisomers two pairs of enantiomers and two
    pairs of diastereomers.

Diastereomers
9
Are these compounds the same?
10
Nonsuperimposable mirror images
11
Enantiomers are different compounds
  • Nonsuperimposable so different compounds
  • One carbon atom is chiral (not symmetric)
  • Nonsuperimposable mirror images are called
    enantiomers

12
Enantiomers
  • Stereoisomers are molecules that have the same
    bonds connecting the same atoms but different
    relative orientations of the bonds
  • Enantiomer one type of stereoisomer
  • Nonsuperimposable mirror images

13
Stereochemistry
  • Enantiomers are identical in physical properties
    except that they rotate polarized light in
    opposite directions. From a biochemical
    standpoint, they are different (Nonsuperimposable
    mirror images).
  • Diastereoisomers possess different physical
    properties (melting point, solubility) and often
    undergo chemical reaction in the different
    fashion.
  • For n asymetric carbons there are
  • 2n maximum possible number of stereoisomers
  • 2n-1 maximum possible number of enantiometric
    pairs
  • That means there are 2n-1 possible
    diastereoisomer pairs

14
Enatiomers of Erythrose
D-Erythrose
L-Erythrose
15
Are you a 3D type of Student?
We dont care about steriochemistry
  • How do chemical representations correlate with
    the actual spatial arrangement of the molecule?
  • The representations are a simplified (but tricky
    way) of showing the molecule.

16
Simple Method for 3D
  • Remember, in the Fischer formula, the vertical
    lines always point back. You dont want your
    molecule to be a circle so in 3D the carbon
    backbone alternates in and out of the page.

17
Simple Method for 3D (II)
  • Check out the second carbon down, in the 3D
    version the carbons attached to this atom both
    are pointing back. The OH group and the H group
    attached to this carbon are pointing forward and
    pointing to the left and right respectively.
    Therefore, in the Fischer formula these are drawn
    to the left and right.

18
Simple Method for 3D (III)
  • Now if you go to the 3rd carbon from the top, you
    will notice that the carbon above and below it
    are pointing forward this is unacceptable. To
    fix this, we rotate the molecule 180.

19
Simple Method for 3D (IV)
  • If you look at the molecule now you will see that
    the OH and H groups on the 3rd carbon now stick
    out of the page and are on the left and right
    side respectively. Draw them into the Fischer
    formula and you get your final molecule.
  • It may seem a little tricky but it is a fun thing
    to do at parties.
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