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A dihedral angle is the angle between two intersecting planes or half-planes. It is a plane angle formed on a third plane, perpendicular to the line of intersection between the two planes or the common edge between the two half-planes. In higher dimensions, a dihedral angle represents the angle between two hyperplanes. In chemistry, it is the clockwise angle between half-planes through two sets of three atoms, having two atoms in common.

Mathematical background
When the two intersecting planes are described in terms of Cartesian coordinates by the two equations
the dihedral angle, between them is given by:
and satisfies It can easily be observed that the angle is independent of
and
.
Alternatively, if nA and nB are normal vector to the planes, one has
where nA · nB is the dot product of the vectors and |nA| |nB| is the product of their lengths.
The absolute value is required in above formulas, as the planes are not changed when changing all coefficient signs in one equation, or replacing one normal vector by its opposite.
However the absolute values can be and should be avoided when considering the dihedral angle of two half planes whose boundaries are the same line. In this case, the half planes can be described by a point P of their intersection, and three vectors b0, b1 and b2 such that P + b0, P + b1 and P + b2 belong respectively to the intersection line, the first half plane, and the second half plane. The dihedral angle of these two half planes is defined by
,
and satisfies In this case, switching the two half-planes gives the same result, and so does replacing
with
In chemistry (see below), we define a dihedral angle such that replacing
with
changes the sign of the angle, which can be between −π and π.
In polymer physics
In some scientific areas such as polymer physics, one may consider a chain of points and links between consecutive points. If the points are sequentially numbered and located at positions r1, r2, r3, etc. then bond vectors are defined by u1=r2−r1, u2=r3−r2, and ui=ri+1−ri, more generally. This is the case for kinematic chains or amino acids in a protein structure. In these cases, one is often interested in the half-planes defined by three consecutive points, and the dihedral angle between two consecutive such half-planes. If u1, u2 and u3 are three consecutive bond vectors, the intersection of the half-planes is oriented, which allows defining a dihedral angle that belongs to the interval (−π, π]. This dihedral angle is defined by
or, using the function atan2,
This dihedral angle does not depend on the orientation of the chain (order in which the point are considered) — reversing this ordering consists of replacing each vector by its opposite vector, and exchanging the indices 1 and 3. Both operations do not change the cosine, but change the sign of the sine. Thus, together, they do not change the angle.
A simpler formula for the same dihedral angle is the following (the proof is given below)
or equivalently,
This can be deduced from previous formulas by using the vector quadruple product formula, and the fact that a scalar triple product is zero if it contains twice the same vector:
Given the definition of the cross product, this means that is the angle in the clockwise direction of the fourth atom compared to the first atom, while looking down the axis from the second atom to the third. Special cases (one may say the usual cases) are
,
and
, which are called the trans, gauche+, and gauche− conformations.
In stereochemistry
Configuration names according to dihedral angle | syn n-Butane in the gauche− conformation (−60°) Newman projection | syn n-Butane sawhorse projection |
In stereochemistry, a torsion angle is defined as a particular example of a dihedral angle, describing the geometric relation of two parts of a molecule joined by a chemical bond. Every set of three non-colinear atoms of a molecule defines a half-plane. As explained above, when two such half-planes intersect (i.e., a set of four consecutively-bonded atoms), the angle between them is a dihedral angle. Dihedral angles are used to specify the molecular conformation.Stereochemical arrangements corresponding to angles between 0° and ±90° are called syn (s), those corresponding to angles between ±90° and 180° anti (a). Similarly, arrangements corresponding to angles between 30° and 150° or between −30° and −150° are called clinal (c) and those between 0° and ±30° or ±150° and 180° are called periplanar (p).
The two types of terms can be combined so as to define four ranges of angle; 0° to ±30° synperiplanar (sp); 30° to 90° and −30° to −90° synclinal (sc); 90° to 150° and −90° to −150° anticlinal (ac); ±150° to 180° antiperiplanar (ap). The synperiplanar conformation is also known as the syn- or cis-conformation; antiperiplanar as anti or trans; and synclinal as gauche or skew.
For example, with n-butane two planes can be specified in terms of the two central carbon atoms and either of the methyl carbon atoms. The syn-conformation shown above, with a dihedral angle of 60° is less stable than the anti-conformation with a dihedral angle of 180°.
For macromolecular usage the symbols T, C, G+, G−, A+ and A− are recommended (ap, sp, +sc, −sc, +ac and −ac respectively).
Proteins
A Ramachandran plot (also known as a Ramachandran diagram or a [φ,ψ] plot), originally developed in 1963 by G. N. Ramachandran, C. Ramakrishnan, and V. Sasisekharan, is a way to visualize energetically allowed regions for backbone dihedral angles ψ against φ of amino acid residues in protein structure. In a protein chain three dihedral angles are defined:
- ω (omega) is the angle in the chain Cα − C' − N − Cα,
- φ (phi) is the angle in the chain C' − N − Cα − C'
- ψ (psi) is the angle in the chain N − Cα − C' − N (called φ′ by Ramachandran)
The figure at right illustrates the location of each of these angles (but it does not show correctly the way they are defined).
The planarity of the peptide bond usually restricts ω to be 180° (the typical trans case) or 0° (the rare cis case). The distance between the Cα atoms in the trans and cis isomers is approximately 3.8 and 2.9 Å, respectively. The vast majority of the peptide bonds in proteins are trans, though the peptide bond to the nitrogen of proline has an increased prevalence of cis compared to other amino-acid pairs.
The side chain dihedral angles are designated with χn (chi-n). They tend to cluster near 180°, 60°, and −60°, which are called the trans, gauche−, and gauche+ conformations. The stability of certain sidechain dihedral angles is affected by the values φ and ψ. For instance, there are direct steric interactions between the Cγ of the side chain in the gauche+ rotamer and the backbone nitrogen of the next residue when ψ is near -60°. This is evident from statistical distributions in backbone-dependent rotamer libraries.
Geometry
Every polyhedron has a dihedral angle at every edge describing the relationship of the two faces that share that edge. This dihedral angle, also called the face angle, is measured as the internal angle with respect to the polyhedron. An angle of 0° means the face normal vectors are antiparallel and the faces overlap each other, which implies that it is part of a degenerate polyhedron. An angle of 180° means the faces are parallel, as in a tiling. An angle greater than 180° exists on concave portions of a polyhedron.
Every dihedral angle in an edge-transitive polyhedron has the same value. This includes the 5 Platonic solids, the 13 Catalan solids, the 4 Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra, the two quasiregular solids, and two quasiregular dual solids.
Law of cosines for dihedral angle
Given 3 faces of a polyhedron which meet at a common vertex P and have edges AP, BP and CP, the cosine of the dihedral angle between the faces containing APC and BPC is:
This can be deduced from the spherical law of cosines, but can also be found by other means.
See also
- Atropisomer
References
- "Angle Between Two Planes". TutorVista.com. Archived from the original on 2020-10-28. Retrieved 2018-07-06.
- Kröger, Martin (2005). Models for polymeric and anisotropic liquids. Springer. ISBN 3540262105.
- Blondel, Arnaud; Karplus, Martin (7 Dec 1998). "New formulation for derivatives of torsion angles and improper torsion angles in molecular mechanics: Elimination of singularities". Journal of Computational Chemistry. 17 (9): 1132–1141. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1096-987X(19960715)17:9<1132::AID-JCC5>3.0.CO;2-T.
- IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "Torsion angle". doi:10.1351/goldbook.T06406
- IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "Dihedral angle". doi:10.1351/goldbook.D01730
- Anslyn, Eric; Dennis Dougherty (2006). Modern Physical Organic Chemistry. University Science. p. 95. ISBN 978-1891389313.
- Ramachandran, G. N.; Ramakrishnan, C.; Sasisekharan, V. (1963). "Stereochemistry of polypeptide chain configurations". Journal of Molecular Biology. 7: 95–9. doi:10.1016/S0022-2836(63)80023-6. PMID 13990617.
- Richardson, J. S. (1981). "The Anatomy and Taxonomy of Protein Structure". Anatomy and Taxonomy of Protein Structures. Advances in Protein Chemistry. Vol. 34. pp. 167–339. doi:10.1016/S0065-3233(08)60520-3. ISBN 9780120342341. PMID 7020376.
- Singh J, Hanson J, Heffernan R, Paliwal K, Yang Y, Zhou Y (August 2018). "Detecting Proline and Non-Proline Cis Isomers in Protein Structures from Sequences Using Deep Residual Ensemble Learning". Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling. 58 (9): 2033–2042. doi:10.1021/acs.jcim.8b00442. PMID 30118602. S2CID 52031431.
- "Side Chain Conformation".
- Dunbrack, RL Jr.; Karplus, M (20 March 1993). "Backbone-dependent rotamer library for proteins. Application to side-chain prediction". Journal of Molecular Biology. 230 (2): 543–74. doi:10.1006/jmbi.1993.1170. PMID 8464064.
- Dunbrack, RL Jr; Karplus, M (May 1994). "Conformational analysis of the backbone-dependent rotamer preferences of protein sidechains". Nature Structural Biology. 1 (5): 334–40. doi:10.1038/nsb0594-334. PMID 7664040. S2CID 9157373.
- "dihedral angle calculator polyhedron". www.had2know.com. Archived from the original on 25 November 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
- "Formula Derivations from Polyhedra". Retrieved 4 December 2024.
External links
- The Dihedral Angle in Woodworking at Tips.FM
- Analysis of the 5 Regular Polyhedra gives a step-by-step derivation of these exact values.
It has been suggested that this article be split into multiple articles Discuss December 2024 A dihedral angle is the angle between two intersecting planes or half planes It is a plane angle formed on a third plane perpendicular to the line of intersection between the two planes or the common edge between the two half planes In higher dimensions a dihedral angle represents the angle between two hyperplanes In chemistry it is the clockwise angle between half planes through two sets of three atoms having two atoms in common Angle between two half planes a b pale blue in a third plane red perpendicular to line of intersection Mathematical backgroundWhen the two intersecting planes are described in terms of Cartesian coordinates by the two equations a1x b1y c1z d1 0 displaystyle a 1 x b 1 y c 1 z d 1 0 a2x b2y c2z d2 0 displaystyle a 2 x b 2 y c 2 z d 2 0 the dihedral angle f displaystyle varphi between them is given by cos f a1a2 b1b2 c1c2 a12 b12 c12a22 b22 c22 displaystyle cos varphi frac left vert a 1 a 2 b 1 b 2 c 1 c 2 right vert sqrt a 1 2 b 1 2 c 1 2 sqrt a 2 2 b 2 2 c 2 2 and satisfies 0 f p 2 displaystyle 0 leq varphi leq pi 2 It can easily be observed that the angle is independent of d1 displaystyle d 1 and d2 displaystyle d 2 Alternatively if nA and nB are normal vector to the planes one has cos f nA nB nA nB displaystyle cos varphi frac left vert mathbf n mathrm A cdot mathbf n mathrm B right vert mathbf n mathrm A mathbf n mathrm B where nA nB is the dot product of the vectors and nA nB is the product of their lengths The absolute value is required in above formulas as the planes are not changed when changing all coefficient signs in one equation or replacing one normal vector by its opposite However the absolute values can be and should be avoided when considering the dihedral angle of two half planes whose boundaries are the same line In this case the half planes can be described by a point P of their intersection and three vectors b0 b1 and b2 such that P b0 P b1 and P b2 belong respectively to the intersection line the first half plane and the second half plane The dihedral angle of these two half planes is defined by cos f b0 b1 b0 b2 b0 b1 b0 b2 displaystyle cos varphi frac mathbf b 0 times mathbf b 1 cdot mathbf b 0 times mathbf b 2 mathbf b 0 times mathbf b 1 mathbf b 0 times mathbf b 2 and satisfies 0 f lt p displaystyle 0 leq varphi lt pi In this case switching the two half planes gives the same result and so does replacing b0 displaystyle mathbf b 0 with b0 displaystyle mathbf b 0 In chemistry see below we define a dihedral angle such that replacing b0 displaystyle mathbf b 0 with b0 displaystyle mathbf b 0 changes the sign of the angle which can be between p and p In polymer physicsIn some scientific areas such as polymer physics one may consider a chain of points and links between consecutive points If the points are sequentially numbered and located at positions r1 r2 r3 etc then bond vectors are defined by u1 r2 r1 u2 r3 r2 and ui ri 1 ri more generally This is the case for kinematic chains or amino acids in a protein structure In these cases one is often interested in the half planes defined by three consecutive points and the dihedral angle between two consecutive such half planes If u1 u2 and u3 are three consecutive bond vectors the intersection of the half planes is oriented which allows defining a dihedral angle that belongs to the interval p p This dihedral angle is defined by cos f u1 u2 u2 u3 u1 u2 u2 u3 sin f u2 u1 u2 u2 u3 u2 u1 u2 u2 u3 displaystyle begin aligned cos varphi amp frac mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 cdot mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 sin varphi amp frac mathbf u 2 cdot mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 mathbf u 2 mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 end aligned or using the function atan2 f atan2 u2 u1 u2 u2 u3 u2 u1 u2 u2 u3 displaystyle varphi operatorname atan2 mathbf u 2 cdot mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 mathbf u 2 mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 cdot mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 This dihedral angle does not depend on the orientation of the chain order in which the point are considered reversing this ordering consists of replacing each vector by its opposite vector and exchanging the indices 1 and 3 Both operations do not change the cosine but change the sign of the sine Thus together they do not change the angle A simpler formula for the same dihedral angle is the following the proof is given below cos f u1 u2 u2 u3 u1 u2 u2 u3 sin f u2 u1 u2 u3 u1 u2 u2 u3 displaystyle begin aligned cos varphi amp frac mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 cdot mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 sin varphi amp frac mathbf u 2 mathbf u 1 cdot mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 end aligned or equivalently f atan2 u2 u1 u2 u3 u1 u2 u2 u3 displaystyle varphi operatorname atan2 mathbf u 2 mathbf u 1 cdot mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 cdot mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 This can be deduced from previous formulas by using the vector quadruple product formula and the fact that a scalar triple product is zero if it contains twice the same vector u1 u2 u2 u3 u2 u3 u1 u2 u2 u3 u2 u1 u2 u3 u1 u2 displaystyle mathbf u 1 times mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 cdot mathbf u 1 mathbf u 2 mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 cdot mathbf u 2 mathbf u 1 mathbf u 2 times mathbf u 3 cdot mathbf u 1 mathbf u 2 Given the definition of the cross product this means that f displaystyle varphi is the angle in the clockwise direction of the fourth atom compared to the first atom while looking down the axis from the second atom to the third Special cases one may say the usual cases are f p displaystyle varphi pi f p 3 displaystyle varphi pi 3 and f p 3 displaystyle varphi pi 3 which are called the trans gauche and gauche conformations In stereochemistryConfiguration names according to dihedral angle syn n Butane in the gauche conformation 60 Newman projection syn n Butane sawhorse projectionFree energy diagram of n butane as a function of dihedral angle In stereochemistry a torsion angle is defined as a particular example of a dihedral angle describing the geometric relation of two parts of a molecule joined by a chemical bond Every set of three non colinear atoms of a molecule defines a half plane As explained above when two such half planes intersect i e a set of four consecutively bonded atoms the angle between them is a dihedral angle Dihedral angles are used to specify the molecular conformation Stereochemical arrangements corresponding to angles between 0 and 90 are called syn s those corresponding to angles between 90 and 180 anti a Similarly arrangements corresponding to angles between 30 and 150 or between 30 and 150 are called clinal c and those between 0 and 30 or 150 and 180 are called periplanar p The two types of terms can be combined so as to define four ranges of angle 0 to 30 synperiplanar sp 30 to 90 and 30 to 90 synclinal sc 90 to 150 and 90 to 150 anticlinal ac 150 to 180 antiperiplanar ap The synperiplanar conformation is also known as the syn or cis conformation antiperiplanar as anti or trans and synclinal as gauche or skew For example with n butane two planes can be specified in terms of the two central carbon atoms and either of the methyl carbon atoms The syn conformation shown above with a dihedral angle of 60 is less stable than the anti conformation with a dihedral angle of 180 For macromolecular usage the symbols T C G G A and A are recommended ap sp sc sc ac and ac respectively Proteins Depiction of a protein showing where w f amp ps refer to A Ramachandran plot also known as a Ramachandran diagram or a f ps plot originally developed in 1963 by G N Ramachandran C Ramakrishnan and V Sasisekharan is a way to visualize energetically allowed regions for backbone dihedral angles ps against f of amino acid residues in protein structure In a protein chain three dihedral angles are defined w omega is the angle in the chain Ca C N Ca f phi is the angle in the chain C N Ca C ps psi is the angle in the chain N Ca C N called f by Ramachandran The figure at right illustrates the location of each of these angles but it does not show correctly the way they are defined The planarity of the peptide bond usually restricts w to be 180 the typical trans case or 0 the rare cis case The distance between the Ca atoms in the trans and cis isomers is approximately 3 8 and 2 9 A respectively The vast majority of the peptide bonds in proteins are trans though the peptide bond to the nitrogen of proline has an increased prevalence of cis compared to other amino acid pairs The side chain dihedral angles are designated with xn chi n They tend to cluster near 180 60 and 60 which are called the trans gauche and gauche conformations The stability of certain sidechain dihedral angles is affected by the values f and ps For instance there are direct steric interactions between the Cg of the side chain in the gauche rotamer and the backbone nitrogen of the next residue when ps is near 60 This is evident from statistical distributions in backbone dependent rotamer libraries GeometryEvery polyhedron has a dihedral angle at every edge describing the relationship of the two faces that share that edge This dihedral angle also called the face angle is measured as the internal angle with respect to the polyhedron An angle of 0 means the face normal vectors are antiparallel and the faces overlap each other which implies that it is part of a degenerate polyhedron An angle of 180 means the faces are parallel as in a tiling An angle greater than 180 exists on concave portions of a polyhedron Every dihedral angle in an edge transitive polyhedron has the same value This includes the 5 Platonic solids the 13 Catalan solids the 4 Kepler Poinsot polyhedra the two quasiregular solids and two quasiregular dual solids Law of cosines for dihedral angleGiven 3 faces of a polyhedron which meet at a common vertex P and have edges AP BP and CP the cosine of the dihedral angle between the faces containing APC and BPC is cos f cos APB cos APC cos BPC sin APC sin BPC displaystyle cos varphi frac cos angle mathrm APB cos angle mathrm APC cos angle mathrm BPC sin angle mathrm APC sin angle mathrm BPC This can be deduced from the spherical law of cosines but can also be found by other means See alsoAtropisomerReferences Angle Between Two Planes TutorVista com Archived from the original on 2020 10 28 Retrieved 2018 07 06 Kroger Martin 2005 Models for polymeric and anisotropic liquids Springer ISBN 3540262105 Blondel Arnaud Karplus Martin 7 Dec 1998 New formulation for derivatives of torsion angles and improper torsion angles in molecular mechanics Elimination of singularities Journal of Computational Chemistry 17 9 1132 1141 doi 10 1002 SICI 1096 987X 19960715 17 9 lt 1132 AID JCC5 gt 3 0 CO 2 T IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 Torsion angle doi 10 1351 goldbook T06406 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 Dihedral angle doi 10 1351 goldbook D01730 Anslyn Eric Dennis Dougherty 2006 Modern Physical Organic Chemistry University Science p 95 ISBN 978 1891389313 Ramachandran G N Ramakrishnan C Sasisekharan V 1963 Stereochemistry of polypeptide chain configurations Journal of Molecular Biology 7 95 9 doi 10 1016 S0022 2836 63 80023 6 PMID 13990617 Richardson J S 1981 The Anatomy and Taxonomy of Protein Structure Anatomy and Taxonomy of Protein Structures Advances in Protein Chemistry Vol 34 pp 167 339 doi 10 1016 S0065 3233 08 60520 3 ISBN 9780120342341 PMID 7020376 Singh J Hanson J Heffernan R Paliwal K Yang Y Zhou Y August 2018 Detecting Proline and Non Proline Cis Isomers in Protein Structures from Sequences Using Deep Residual Ensemble Learning Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling 58 9 2033 2042 doi 10 1021 acs jcim 8b00442 PMID 30118602 S2CID 52031431 Side Chain Conformation Dunbrack RL Jr Karplus M 20 March 1993 Backbone dependent rotamer library for proteins Application to side chain prediction Journal of Molecular Biology 230 2 543 74 doi 10 1006 jmbi 1993 1170 PMID 8464064 Dunbrack RL Jr Karplus M May 1994 Conformational analysis of the backbone dependent rotamer preferences of protein sidechains Nature Structural Biology 1 5 334 40 doi 10 1038 nsb0594 334 PMID 7664040 S2CID 9157373 dihedral angle calculator polyhedron www had2know com Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 25 October 2015 Formula Derivations from Polyhedra Retrieved 4 December 2024 External linksThe Dihedral Angle in Woodworking at Tips FM Analysis of the 5 Regular Polyhedra gives a step by step derivation of these exact values