Absolute Configuration

Paired Concept:
Relative Configuration
Definition: The unambiguous three-dimensional spatial arrangement of substituents around a stereogenic element, defined independently of any other stereocenter and commonly designated using the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog (CIP) system (R/S, E/Z, P/M).
Context: Absolute configuration provides the definitive stereochemical identity of a molecule. In pharmaceutical chemistry, it is a regulatory requirement to specify absolute configuration for chiral active pharmaceutical ingredients, as different configurations can lead to distinct pharmacological, toxicological, and metabolic outcomes. Absolute configuration must be established using reliable methods such as X-ray crystallography (with anomalous dispersion), vibrational circular dichroism, electronic circular dichroism with exciton analysis, or unambiguous chemical correlation.
Example: The assignment of (S)-thalidomide and (R)-thalidomide, where each enantiomer exhibits markedly different biological effects.
Related Terms: Relative Configuration; CIP Rules; Stereogenic Center; Absolute Stereochemistry; Misassignment of Configuration.
Reference: IUPAC. Compendium of Chemical Terminology (IUPAC Gold Book). 2nd Edition, 1997 (updated 2019).