Absolute structure
From Online Dictionary of Crystallography
Revision as of 12:27, 15 February 2006 by HowardFlack (talk | contribs)
Definition
The spatial arrangement of the atoms of a physically identified non-centrosymmetric crystal and its description by way of unit-cell dimensions, space group, and representative coordinates of all atoms.
Background
Absolute structure is a specification of the orientation of a crystal under the operation of inversion through a point otherwise known as parity (P). Under P a centrosymmetric object is invariant so there is clearly no absolute structure to specify. However the orientation of The need for the notion of absolute structure arises due
Absolute structure is to a crystal what absolute configuration is to a molecule. Both describe certain aspects of the spatial arrangement of the atoms in their respective object. However the object, its symmetry and the method of its specification are different. The table compares the two cases.
Absolute Structure Absolute Configuration Property spatial arrangement spatial arrangement Content atoms atoms Object crystal molecule Symmetry non-centrosymmetric chiral Specification crystallographic stereochemical space group CIP cell dimensions atomic coordinates
Whereas absolute configuration distinguishes between and specifies enantiomers (chiral molecules of opposite hand), absolute structure does the same for inversion-related models of the crystal structure.
Related chemical terms
The IUPAC Basic Terminology of Stereochemistry contains definitions of related chemical terms of use to the crystallographer, viz: absolute configuration, chiral, chirality, chirality sense, enantiomer, enantiomerically pure, enantiomorph, racemate, racemic, racemic conglomerate and relative configuration.