Stereoisomers are compounds that are identical in composition and connectivity but have a different spatial arrangement of atoms around the central atom. A molecule having multiple stereocenters will produce many possible stereoisomers. In compounds whose stereoisomerism is due to
tetrahedral (sp3) stereogenic centers, the total number of hypothetically possible stereoisomers will not exceed 2
n, where
n is the number of tetrahedral stereocenters. However, this is an upper bound because molecules with symmetry frequently have fewer stereoisomers. The stereoisomers produced by the presence of multiple stereocenters can be defined as
enantiomers (non-superposable mirror images) and
diastereomers (non-superposable, non-identical, non-mirror image molecules). Since a meso compound is superposable on its mirror image, the two "stereoisomers" are actually identical. Resultantly, a meso compound will reduce the number of stereoisomers to below the hypothetical 2
n amount due to symmetry. Additionally, certain configurations may not exist due to
steric reasons.
Cyclic compounds with chiral centers may not exhibit chirality due to the presence of a two-fold rotation axis.
Planar chirality may also provide for chirality without having an actual chiral center present. == Configuration ==