Originally the thermodynamic preference for polar groups bonded to C-1 (the anomeric
carbon of a glycopyranosyl derivative) to take up an
axial position.
This effect is now considered to be a special case of a general preference (the generalized
anomeric effect) for
synclinal (
gauche) conformations about the bond C–Y in the system X–C–Y–C where X and Y are heteroatoms
having nonbonding electron pairs, commonly at least one of which is nitrogen, oxygen
or fluorine. For example in chloro(methoxy)methane the anomeric effect stabilizes
the
synclinalconformation.
In alkyl glycopyranosides the anomeric effect operates at two sites (i) along the
endocyclic C-1 oxygen bond (endo-anomeric effect) and (ii) along the exocyclic C-1
oxygen bond (
exo-anomeric effect). The opposite preference is claimed for some systems e.g. glycopyranosyltrialkylammonium
salts, and has been referred to as the reverse anomeric effect.
Source:
PAC, 1996, 68, 2193
(Basic terminology of stereochemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1996))
on page 2198