Organic Chemistry
When studying newman projections, dihedral angles are used to determine the placements of atoms and their distance from one another. This can indicate staggered and eclipsed orientation, but is specifically used to determine the angle between 2 specific atoms on opposing carbons. Torsional strain is a term used to refer to the barrier of rotation in the molecule being studied. This is how conformations are assigned energy levels. In the example of ethane in Newman projection it shows that rotation around the carbon-carbon bond is not entirely free but that an energy barrier exists. The ethane molecule in the eclipsed conformation is said to suffer from torsional strain and by a rotation around the carbon carbon bond to the staggered conformation around 12.5 kJ/mol of torsional energy is released. In regards to butane and its 4 carbon chain, three carbon-carbon bonds are available to rotate. The example below is looking down the C2 and C3 bond. Below is the sawhorse and Newman representation of butane in an eclipsed conformation with the two CH3 groups (C1 and C4) at a 0 degree angle from one another (left).Structural Applications
As established by X-ray crystallography, octachlorodimolybdate(II) anion ( 2Cl8">o2Cl8sup>4-) has an eclipsed conformation. This sterically unfavorable geometry is given as evidence for a quadruple bond between the Mo centers. Experiments such as X-ray and electron diffraction analyses, nuclear magnetic resonance, microwave spectroscopies, and more have allowed researchers to determine which cycloalkane structures are the most stable based on the different possible conformations. Another method that was shown successful is molecular mechanics, a computational method that allows the total strain energies of different conformations to be found and analyzed (''see also'' chemical bonding: Computational approaches to molecular structure). It was found that the most stable conformations had lower energies based on values of energy due to bond distances and bond angles. In many cases, isomers of alkanes with branched chains have lower boiling points than those that are unbranched, which has been shown through experimentation with isomers of C8H18. This is because of a combination of intermolecular forces and size that results from the branched chains. The more branches that an alkane has, the more extended its shape is; meanwhile, if it is less branched then it will have more intermolecular attractive forces that will need to be broken which is the cause of the increased boiling point for unbranched alkanes. In another case, 2,2,3,3-tetramethylbutane is shaped more like an ellipsoid causing it to be able to form a crystal lattice which raises the melting point of the molecule because it will take more energy to transition from a solid to a liquid state.See also
* Gauche effectReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Eclipsed Conformation Stereochemistry