What do L-, D-, R-, and S- (in enantiomers) stand for?

1 Answer
May 14, 2016

#L# and #D# refers to the direction of rotation of plane-polarized light. #R# and #S# refer to the absolute configuration possessed by the chiral centre.

Explanation:

#L# short for #"laevorotatory"# and #D# #"(dextrorotatory)"# refer to the direction, anticlockwise, or clockwise, that a solution of the molecule rotates plane-polarized light. It is a bit of an old-fashioned term, but it relates SOLELY to the experimental result. See here.

On the other hand, the terms #R# and #S# refers specifically to the absolute configuration of a chiral centre. And to determine this, specialized experimental techniques are necessary.

There are some #R# isomers that rotate plane-polarized light in an anticlockwise direction, and #L# isomers that rotate in the clockwise direction. Thus the terms #R# and #S# refer to absolute configuration, and not the polarized light experiment.