Isomerism and StereochemistryhardMCQ SINGLE⭐ Must-Do

An optically active liquid mixture consists of a pure dextrorotatory () enantiomer and its corresponIsomerism and Stereochemistry Chemistry Question

Question

An optically active liquid mixture consists of a pure dextrorotatory ($d$) enantiomer and its corresponding pure levorotatory ($l$) enantiomer. If the specific rotation of the pure '$d$' isomer is $+30^\circ$, and the observed specific rotation of the contaminated mixture is exactly $+22.5^\circ$, what is the calculated optical purity (enantiomeric excess, ee) of the final mixture?

Answer: C

💡 Solution & Explanation

Optical Purity (Enantiomeric Excess, ee) is defined mathematically as the ratio of the observed specific rotation of the mixture to the specific rotation of the pure major enantiomer, multiplied by 100. Therefore, $ee = ( \alpha_{obs} / \alpha_{pure} ) \times 100$. Substituting the known values: $ee = (22.5^\circ / 30^\circ) \times 100 = 0.75 \times 100 = 75\%$.

💬
Still have doubts about this question?
Send it to our AI chemistry tutor on WhatsApp — gets answered in minutes
Ask on WhatsApp →

Practice 22,000+ questions like this

AI-adaptive practice, video lectures, and full JEE Advanced Chemistry content — all in one place.

JEE Advanced · JEE Mains · NEET · IChO · AP Chemistry