Stereoisomerism about double bonds arises because rotation about the double bond is restricted, keeping the substituents fixed relative to each other. If the two substituents on at least one end of a double bond are the same, then there is no stereoisomer and the double bond is not a stereocenter, e.g.
propene, CH3CH=CH2 where the two substituents at one end are both H. Traditionally, double bond stereochemistry was described as either
cis (Latin, on this side) or
trans (Latin, across), in reference to the relative position of substituents on either side of a double bond. A simple example of
cis–
trans isomerism is the 1,2-disubstituted ethenes, like the dichloroethene (C2H2Cl2) isomers shown below. Molecule I is
cis-1,2-dichloroethene and molecule II is
trans-1,2-dichloroethene. Due to occasional ambiguity, IUPAC adopted a more rigorous system wherein the substituents at each end of the double bond are assigned priority based on their
atomic number. If the high-priority substituents are on the same side of the bond, it is assigned Z (Ger.
zusammen, together). If they are on opposite sides, it is E (Ger.
entgegen, opposite). Since chlorine has a larger atomic number than hydrogen, it is the highest-priority group. Using this notation to name the above pictured molecules, molecule I is (
Z)-1,2-dichloroethene and molecule II is (
E)-1,2-dichloroethene. It is not the case that Z and
cis, or E and
trans, are always interchangeable. Consider the following fluoromethylpentene: The proper name for this molecule is either
trans-2-fluoro-3-methylpent-2-ene because the alkyl groups that form the backbone chain (i.e., methyl and ethyl) reside across the double bond from each other, or (
Z)-2-fluoro-3-methylpent-2-ene because the highest-priority groups on each side of the double bond are on the same side of the double bond. Fluoro is the highest-priority group on the left side of the double bond, and ethyl is the highest-priority group on the right side of the molecule. The terms
cis and
trans are also used to describe the relative position of two substituents on a ring;
cis if on the same side, otherwise
trans. ==Conformers==