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  2. Chirality (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirality_(chemistry)

    An achiral molecule having chiral conformations could theoretically form a mixture of right-handed and left-handed crystals, as often happens with racemic mixtures of chiral molecules (see Chiral resolution#Spontaneous resolution and related specialized techniques), or as when achiral liquid silicon dioxide is cooled to the point of becoming ...

  3. Chirality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirality

    A chiral molecule is a type of molecule that has a non-superposable mirror image. The feature that is most often the cause of chirality in molecules is the presence of an asymmetric carbon atom. [16] [17] The term "chiral" in general is used to describe the object that is non-superposable on its mirror image. [18]

  4. Cholesteric liquid crystal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cholesteric_liquid_crystal

    [1] [7] Lehmann was the first to coin the term liquid crystal. [8] Studies in liquid crystals soon blossomed, and in 1922 Georges Friedel created the classification system of liquid crystals still used today. In this system, he named the chiral variety of liquid crystals cholesteric, as they were discovered from a cholesterol derivative. [5] [9]

  5. Liquid crystal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_crystal

    Thermotropic chiral LCs whose pitch varies strongly with temperature can be used as crude liquid crystal thermometers, since the color of the material will change as the pitch is changed. Liquid crystal color transitions are used on many aquarium and pool thermometers as well as on thermometers for infants or baths. [84]

  6. Chiral media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiral_media

    Chiral mirrors can be realized by placing a 2d-chiral metamaterial in front of a conventional mirror. [32] The concept has been exploited in holography to realize independent holograms for left-handed and right-handed circularly polarized electromagnetic waves. [ 33 ]

  7. Crystal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal

    A crystal or crystalline solid is a solid material whose constituents ... (230 is commonly cited, but this treats chiral equivalents as separate entities), ...

  8. Racemic crystallography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racemic_crystallography

    Racemic crystal structure of Rv1738 from Mycobacterium tuberculosis produced by racemic protein crystallography. Racemic crystallography is a technique used in structural biology where crystals of a protein molecule are developed from an equimolar mixture of an L-protein molecule of natural chirality and its D-protein mirror image.

  9. Homochirality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homochirality

    When sodium chlorate is allowed to crystallize from water and the collected crystals examined in a polarimeter, each crystal turns out to be chiral and either the L form or the D form. In an ordinary experiment the amount of L crystals collected equals the amount of D crystals (corrected for statistical effects