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      The Driving Mechanism Behind Attrition-Enhanced Deracemization

      , , , , , , ,
      Angewandte Chemie
      Wiley

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          Total Chiral Symmetry Breaking during Crystallization: Who needs a "Mother Crystal"?

          Processes that can produce states of broken chiral symmetry are of particular interest to physics, chemistry and biology. Chiral symmetry breaking during crystallization of sodium chlorate occurs via the production of secondary crystals of the same handedness from a single "mother crystal" that seeds the solution. Here we report that a large and "symmetric" population of D- and L-crystals moves into complete chiral purity disappearing one of the enantiomers. This result shows: (i) a new symmetry breaking process incompatible with the hypothesis of a single "mother crystal"; (ii) that complete symmetry breaking and chiral purity can be achieved from an initial system with both enantiomers. These findings demand a new explanation to the process of total symmetry breaking in crystallization without the intervention of a "mother crystal" and open the debate on this fascinating phenomenon. We present arguments to show that our experimental data can been explained with a new model of "complete chiral purity induced by nonlinear autocatalysis and recycling".
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            Complete chiral symmetry breaking of an amino acid derivative directed by circularly polarized light.

            Circularly polarized light (CPL) emitted from star-forming regions is an attractive candidate as a cause of single chirality in nature. It has remained difficult, however, to translate the relatively small chemical effects observed on irradiation of molecular systems with CPL into high enantiomeric excesses. Here we demonstrate that irradiation of a racemic amino acid derivative with CPL leads to a small amount of chiral induction that can be amplified readily to give an enantiopure solid phase. A racemate composed of equal amounts of left- and right-handed crystals in contact with the irradiated solution is converted completely into crystals of single-handedness through abrasive grinding when racemization is effected in the solution. The rotation sense of the CPL fully determines the handedness of the final solid state. These findings illustrate the potential effectiveness of CPL in the control of molecular asymmetry, which is relevant for the origin of the single chirality inherent to many biological molecules.
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              Evolution of solid phase homochirality for a proteinogenic amino acid.

              The inexorable evolution of solid-phase single chirality is demonstrated for the first time for a proteinogenic amino acid. Enantioenrichment is observed both under attrition-enhanced conditions and without the aid of particle grinding. Differences in the form of the conversion profiles for the process under the two sets of conditions provide suggestions concerning the mechanism of the transformation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Angewandte Chemie
                Angew. Chem.
                Wiley
                00448249
                November 02 2010
                November 02 2010
                : 122
                : 45
                : 8613-8616
                Article
                10.1002/ange.201002036
                45a8bef4-a02f-4e5a-8290-c15a2e580508
                © 2010

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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