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Acyl chloride

In organic chemistry, an acyl chloride (or acid chloride) is an organic compound with the functional group −C(=O)Cl. Their formula is usually written R−COCl, where R is a side chain. They are reactive derivatives of carboxylic acids (R−C(=O)OH). A specific example of an acyl chloride is acetyl chloride, CH3COCl. Acyl chlorides are the most important subset of acyl halides.

General chemical structure of an acyl chloride

Nomenclature edit

Where the acyl chloride moiety takes priority, acyl chlorides are named by taking the name of the parent carboxylic acid, and substituting -yl chloride for -ic acid. Thus:

acetic acid (CH3COOH) → acetyl chloride (CH3COCl)
benzoic acid (C6H5COOH) → benzoyl chloride (C6H5COCl)
butyric acid (C3H7COOH) → butyryl chloride (C3H7COCl)

(Idiosyncratically, for some trivial names, -oyl chloride substitutes -ic acid. For example, pivalic acid becomes pivaloyl chloride and acrylic acid becomes acryloyl chloride. The names pivalyl chloride and acrylyl chloride are less commonly used, although they are arguably more logical.)

When other functional groups take priority, acyl chlorides are considered prefixes — chlorocarbonyl-:[1]

acetic acid (CH3COOH) → (chlorocarbonyl)acetic acid (ClOCCH2COOH)

Properties edit

Lacking the ability to form hydrogen bonds, acyl chlorides have lower boiling and melting points than similar carboxylic acids. For example, acetic acid boils at 118 °C, whereas acetyl chloride boils at 51 °C. Like most carbonyl compounds, infrared spectroscopy reveals a band near 1750 cm−1.

The simplest stable acyl chloride is acetyl chloride; formyl chloride is not stable at room temperature, although it can be prepared at –60 °C or below.[2][3]

Acyl chlorides hydrolyze (react with water) to form the corresponding carboxylic acid and hydrochloric acid:

 
 
Structure of 3,5-dinitrobenzoyl chloride with selected bond distances (picometers) and bond angles shown in red.[4]

Synthesis edit

Industrial routes edit

The industrial route to acetyl chloride involves the reaction of acetic anhydride with hydrogen chloride:[5]

 

Propionyl chloride is produced by chlorination of propionic acid with phosgene:[6]

 

Benzoyl chloride is produced by the partial hydrolysis of benzotrichloride:[7]

 

Similarly, benzotrichlorides react with carboxylic acids to the acid chloride. This conversion is practiced for the reaction of 1,4-bis(trichloromethyl)benzene to give terephthaloyl chloride:

 

Laboratory methods: thionyl chloride edit

In the laboratory, acyl chlorides are generally prepared by treating carboxylic acids with thionyl chloride (SOCl2).[8] The reaction is catalyzed by dimethylformamide and other additives.[9][10]

 

Thionyl chloride[11]⁠ is a well-suited reagent as the by-products (HCl, SO2) are gases and residual thionyl chloride can be easily removed as a result of its low boiling point (76 °C).

Laboratory methods: phosphorus chlorides edit

Phosphorus trichloride (PCl3) is popular,[12] although excess reagent is required.[9] Phosphorus pentachloride (PCl5) is also effective,[13][14] but only one chloride is transferred:

 

Laboratory methods: oxalyl chloride edit

Another method involves the use of oxalyl chloride:

 

The reaction is catalysed by dimethylformamide (DMF), which reacts with oxalyl chloride to give the Vilsmeier reagent, an iminium intermediate that which reacts with the carboxylic acid to form a mixed imino-anhydride. This structure undergoes an acyl substitution with the liberated chloride, forming the acid anhydride and releasing regenerated molecule of DMF.[10] Relative to thionyl chloride, oxalyl chloride is more expensive but also a milder reagent and therefore more selective.

 

Other laboratory methods edit

Acid chlorides can be used as a chloride source.[15] Thus acetyl chloride can be distilled from a mixture of benzoyl chloride and acetic acid:[9]

 

Other methods that do not form HCl include the Appel reaction:[16]

 

Another is the use of cyanuric chloride:[17]

 

Reactions edit

Acyl chloride are reactive, versatile reagents.[18] Acyl chlorides have a greater reactivity than other carboxylic acid derivatives like acid anhydrides, esters or amides:

 

Nucleophilic reactions edit

Acid chlorides are useful for the preparation of amides, esters, anhydrides. These reactions generate chloride, which can be undesirable. Acyl chlorides hydrolyze, yielding the carboxylic acid:

 

This hydrolysis is usually a nuisance rather than intentional. Acyl chlorides are used to prepare acid anhydrides, amides and esters, by reacting acid chlorides with: a salt of a carboxylic acid, an amine, or an alcohol, respectively.

 
 
 

Mechanism edit

The alcoholysis of acyl halides (the alkoxy-dehalogenation) is believed to proceed via an SN2 mechanism (Scheme 10).[19]⁠ However, the mechanism can also be tetrahedral or SN1 in highly polar solvents[20]⁠ (while the SN2 reaction involves a concerted reaction, the tetrahedral addition-elimination pathway involves a discernible intermediate).[21]

 

Bases, such as pyridine or N,N-dimethylformamide, catalyze acylations.[14][10] These reagents activate the acyl chloride via a nucleophilic catalysis mechanism. The amine attacks the carbonyl bond and presumably[22]⁠ first forms a transient tetrahedral intermediate, then forms a quaternary acylammonium salt by the displacement of the leaving group. This quaternary acylammonium salt is more susceptible to attack by alcohols or other nucleophiles.

 

The use of two phases (aqueous for amine, organic for acyl chloride) is called the Schotten-Baumann reaction. This approach is used in the preparation of nylon via the so-called nylon rope trick.[23]

Conversion to ketones edit

Carbon nucleophiles such as Grignard reagents, convert acyl chlorides to ketones, which in turn are susceptible to the attack by second equivalent to yield the tertiary alcohol. The reaction of acyl halides with certain organocadmium reagents stops at the ketone stage.[24] The reaction with Gilman reagents also afford ketones, reflecting the low nucleophilicity of these lithium diorganocopper compounds.[14]

Reduction edit

Acyl chlorides are reduced by lithium aluminium hydride and diisobutylaluminium hydride to give primary alcohols. Lithium tri-tert-butoxyaluminium hydride, a bulky hydride donor, reduces acyl chlorides to aldehydes, as does the Rosenmund reduction using hydrogen gas over a poisoned palladium catalyst.[25]

 
The Rosenmund reduction

Acylation of arenes edit

With Lewis acid catalysts like ferric chloride or aluminium chloride, acyl chlorides participate in Friedel-Crafts acylations, to give aryl ketones:[12][14]

 

Because of the harsh conditions and the reactivity of the intermediates, this otherwise quite useful reaction tends to be messy, as well as environmentally unfriendly.

Oxidative addition edit

Acyl chlorides react with low-valent metal centers to give transition metal acyl complexes. Illustrative is the oxidative addition of acetyl chloride to Vaska's complex, converting square planar Ir(I) to octahedral Ir(III):[26]

 

Hazards edit

Low molecular weight acyl chlorides are often lachrymators, and they react violently with water, alcohols, and amines.

References edit

  1. ^ Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry, R-5.7.6 Acid halides
  2. ^ Sih, John C. (2001-04-15), "Formyl Chloride", in John Wiley & Sons, Ltd (ed.), Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, doi:10.1002/047084289x.rf026, ISBN 9780471936237
  3. ^ Richard O.C. Norman; James M. Coxon (16 September 1993). Principles of Organic Synthesis, 3rd Edition. CRC Press. p. 371. ISBN 978-0-7487-6162-3.
  4. ^ Wang, Hong-Yong; Xie, Min-Hao; Luo, Shi-Neng; Zou, Pei; Liu, Ya-Ling (2009). "3,5-Dinitrobenzoyl chloride". Acta Crystallographica Section E. 65 (10): o2460. doi:10.1107/S1600536809036228. PMC 2970283. PMID 21577915.
  5. ^ US patent 5672749, Phillip R. DeVrou, W. Bryan Waites, Robert E. Young, "Process for preparing acetyl chloride" 
  6. ^ Samel, Ulf-Rainer; Kohler, Walter; Gamer, Armin Otto; Keuser, Ullrich (2005). "Propionic acid and derivatives". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a22_223. ISBN 978-3527306732.
  7. ^ Maki, Takao; Takeda, Kazuo (2002). "Benzoic acid and derivatives". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a03_555. ISBN 978-3527306732.
  8. ^ Helferich, B.; Schaefer, W. (1929). "n-Butyrl chloride". Organic Syntheses. 9: 32. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.009.0032.
  9. ^ a b c Martin Ansell (1972). "Preparation of acyl halides". In Saul Patai (ed.). Acyl Halides. PATAI'S Chemistry of Functional Groups. pp. 35–68. doi:10.1002/9780470771273.ch2. ISBN 9780470771273.
  10. ^ a b c Clayden, Jonathan (2001). Organic chemistry. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 276–296. ISBN 0-19-850346-6.
  11. ^ J. S. Pizey, Synthetic Reagents, Vol. 1, Halsted Press, New York, 1974.
  12. ^ a b Allen, C. F. H.; Barker, W. E. (1932). "Desoxybenzoin". Organic Syntheses. 12: 16. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.012.0016.
  13. ^ Adams, Roger (1923). "p-Nitrobenzoyl Chloride". Organic Syntheses. 3: 75. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.003.0075.
  14. ^ a b c d Boyd, Robert W.; Morrison, Robert (1992). Organic Chemistry. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice Hall. pp. 666–762. ISBN 0-13-643669-2.
  15. ^ L. P. Kyrides (1940). "Fumaryl Chloride". Organic Syntheses. 20: 51. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.020.0051.
  16. ^ "Triphenylphosphine-carbon tetrachloride Taschner, Michael J. e-EROS: Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis, 2001
  17. ^ K. Venkataraman; D. R. Wagle (1979). "Cyanuric chloride : a useful reagent for converting carboxylic acids into chlorides, esters, amides and peptides". Tetrahedron Lett. 20 (32): 3037–3040. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(00)71006-9.
  18. ^ Sonntag, Norman O. V. (1953-04-01). "The Reactions of Aliphatic Acid Chlorides". Chemical Reviews. 52 (2): 237–416. doi:10.1021/cr60162a001. ISSN 0009-2665.
  19. ^ Bentley, T. William; Llewellyn, Gareth; McAlister, J. Anthony (January 1996). "SN2 Mechanism for Alcoholysis, Aminolysis, and Hydrolysis of Acetyl Chloride". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 61 (22): 7927–7932. doi:10.1021/jo9609844. ISSN 0022-3263. PMID 11667754.
  20. ^ C. H. Bamford and C. F. H. Tipper, Comprehensive Chemical Kinetics: Ester Formation and Hydrolysis and Related Reactions, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1972.
  21. ^ Fox, Joseph M.; Dmitrenko, Olga; Liao, Lian-an; Bach, Robert D. (October 2004). "Computational Studies of Nucleophilic Substitution at Carbonyl Carbon: the S N 2 Mechanism versus the Tetrahedral Intermediate in Organic Synthesis". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 69 (21): 7317–7328. doi:10.1021/jo049494z. ISSN 0022-3263. PMID 15471486.
  22. ^ Hubbard, Patricia; Brittain, William J. (February 1998). "Mechanism of Amine-Catalyzed Ester Formation from an Acid Chloride and Alcohol". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 63 (3): 677–683. doi:10.1021/jo9716643. ISSN 0022-3263. PMID 11672060.
  23. ^ Morgan, Paul W.; Kwolek, Stephanie L. (April 1959). "The nylon rope trick: Demonstration of condensation polymerization". Journal of Chemical Education. 36 (4): 182. Bibcode:1959JChEd..36..182M. doi:10.1021/ed036p182. ISSN 0021-9584.
  24. ^ David A. Shirley (2011). "The Synthesis of Ketones from Acid Halides and Organometallic Compounds of Magnesium, Zinc, and Cadmium". Org. Reactions: 28–58. doi:10.1002/0471264180.or008.02. ISBN 978-0471264187.
  25. ^ William Reusch. "Carboxylic Acid Derivatives". VirtualText of Organic Chemistry. Michigan State University. Archived from the original on 2016-05-16. Retrieved 2009-02-19.
  26. ^ Hartwig, John (2010). Organotransition Metal Chemistry: From Bonding to Catalysis. New York: University Science Books. p. 1160. ISBN 978-1-938787-15-7.

acyl, chloride, this, article, about, functional, group, chemical, compound, acetyl, chloride, organic, chemistry, acyl, chloride, acid, chloride, organic, compound, with, functional, group, their, formula, usually, written, cocl, where, side, chain, they, rea. This article is about the functional group For the chemical compound see Acetyl chloride In organic chemistry an acyl chloride or acid chloride is an organic compound with the functional group C O Cl Their formula is usually written R COCl where R is a side chain They are reactive derivatives of carboxylic acids R C O OH A specific example of an acyl chloride is acetyl chloride CH3COCl Acyl chlorides are the most important subset of acyl halides General chemical structure of an acyl chloride Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Properties 3 Synthesis 3 1 Industrial routes 3 2 Laboratory methods thionyl chloride 3 3 Laboratory methods phosphorus chlorides 3 4 Laboratory methods oxalyl chloride 3 5 Other laboratory methods 4 Reactions 4 1 Nucleophilic reactions 4 1 1 Mechanism 4 2 Conversion to ketones 4 3 Reduction 4 4 Acylation of arenes 4 5 Oxidative addition 5 Hazards 6 ReferencesNomenclature editWhere the acyl chloride moiety takes priority acyl chlorides are named by taking the name of the parent carboxylic acid and substituting yl chloride for ic acid Thus acetic acid CH3COOH acetyl chloride CH3COCl benzoic acid C6H5COOH benzoyl chloride C6H5COCl butyric acid C3H7COOH butyryl chloride C3H7COCl Idiosyncratically for some trivial names oyl chloride substitutes ic acid For example pivalic acid becomes pivaloyl chloride and acrylic acid becomes acryloyl chloride The names pivalyl chloride and acrylyl chloride are less commonly used although they are arguably more logical When other functional groups take priority acyl chlorides are considered prefixes chlorocarbonyl 1 acetic acid CH3COOH chlorocarbonyl acetic acid ClOCCH2COOH Properties editLacking the ability to form hydrogen bonds acyl chlorides have lower boiling and melting points than similar carboxylic acids For example acetic acid boils at 118 C whereas acetyl chloride boils at 51 C Like most carbonyl compounds infrared spectroscopy reveals a band near 1750 cm 1 The simplest stable acyl chloride is acetyl chloride formyl chloride is not stable at room temperature although it can be prepared at 60 C or below 2 3 Acyl chlorides hydrolyze react with water to form the corresponding carboxylic acid and hydrochloric acid RCOCl H2O RCOOH HCl displaystyle ce RCOCl H2O gt RCOOH HCl nbsp nbsp Structure of 3 5 dinitrobenzoyl chloride with selected bond distances picometers and bond angles shown in red 4 Synthesis editIndustrial routes edit The industrial route to acetyl chloride involves the reaction of acetic anhydride with hydrogen chloride 5 CH3CO 2O HCl CH3COCl CH3CO2H displaystyle ce CH3CO 2O HCl gt CH3COCl CH3CO2H nbsp Propionyl chloride is produced by chlorination of propionic acid with phosgene 6 CH3CH2CO2H COCl2 CH3CH2COCl HCl CO2 displaystyle ce CH3CH2CO2H COCl2 gt CH3CH2COCl HCl CO2 nbsp Benzoyl chloride is produced by the partial hydrolysis of benzotrichloride 7 C6H5CCl3 H2O C6H5C O Cl 2HCl displaystyle ce C6H5CCl3 H2O gt C6H5C O Cl 2 HCl nbsp Similarly benzotrichlorides react with carboxylic acids to the acid chloride This conversion is practiced for the reaction of 1 4 bis trichloromethyl benzene to give terephthaloyl chloride C6H4 CCl3 2 C6H4 CO2H 2 2C6H4 COCl 2 2HCl displaystyle ce C6H4 CCl3 2 C6H4 CO2H 2 gt 2 C6H4 COCl 2 2 HCl nbsp Laboratory methods thionyl chloride edit In the laboratory acyl chlorides are generally prepared by treating carboxylic acids with thionyl chloride SOCl2 8 The reaction is catalyzed by dimethylformamide and other additives 9 10 nbsp Thionyl chloride 11 is a well suited reagent as the by products HCl SO2 are gases and residual thionyl chloride can be easily removed as a result of its low boiling point 76 C Laboratory methods phosphorus chlorides edit Phosphorus trichloride PCl3 is popular 12 although excess reagent is required 9 Phosphorus pentachloride PCl5 is also effective 13 14 but only one chloride is transferred RCO2H PCl5 RCOCl POCl3 HCl displaystyle ce RCO2H PCl5 gt RCOCl POCl3 HCl nbsp Laboratory methods oxalyl chloride edit Another method involves the use of oxalyl chloride RCO2H ClCOCOCl DMFRCOCl CO CO2 HCl displaystyle ce RCO2H ClCOCOCl gt DMF RCOCl CO CO2 HCl nbsp The reaction is catalysed by dimethylformamide DMF which reacts with oxalyl chloride to give the Vilsmeier reagent an iminium intermediate that which reacts with the carboxylic acid to form a mixed imino anhydride This structure undergoes an acyl substitution with the liberated chloride forming the acid anhydride and releasing regenerated molecule of DMF 10 Relative to thionyl chloride oxalyl chloride is more expensive but also a milder reagent and therefore more selective nbsp Other laboratory methods edit Acid chlorides can be used as a chloride source 15 Thus acetyl chloride can be distilled from a mixture of benzoyl chloride and acetic acid 9 CH3CO2H C6H5COCl CH3COCl C6H5CO2H displaystyle ce CH3CO2H C6H5COCl gt CH3COCl C6H5CO2H nbsp Other methods that do not form HCl include the Appel reaction 16 RCO2H Ph3P CCl4 RCOCl Ph3PO HCCl3 displaystyle ce RCO2H Ph3P CCl4 gt RCOCl Ph3PO HCCl3 nbsp Another is the use of cyanuric chloride 17 RCO2H C3N3Cl3 RCOCl C3N3Cl2OH displaystyle ce RCO2H C3N3Cl3 gt RCOCl C3N3Cl2OH nbsp Reactions editAcyl chloride are reactive versatile reagents 18 Acyl chlorides have a greater reactivity than other carboxylic acid derivatives like acid anhydrides esters or amides nbsp dd dd Nucleophilic reactions edit Acid chlorides are useful for the preparation of amides esters anhydrides These reactions generate chloride which can be undesirable Acyl chlorides hydrolyze yielding the carboxylic acid nbsp dd dd This hydrolysis is usually a nuisance rather than intentional Acyl chlorides are used to prepare acid anhydrides amides and esters by reacting acid chlorides with a salt of a carboxylic acid an amine or an alcohol respectively nbsp dd dd nbsp dd dd nbsp dd dd Mechanism edit The alcoholysis of acyl halides the alkoxy dehalogenation is believed to proceed via an SN2 mechanism Scheme 10 19 However the mechanism can also be tetrahedral or SN1 in highly polar solvents 20 while the SN2 reaction involves a concerted reaction the tetrahedral addition elimination pathway involves a discernible intermediate 21 nbsp Bases such as pyridine or N N dimethylformamide catalyze acylations 14 10 These reagents activate the acyl chloride via a nucleophilic catalysis mechanism The amine attacks the carbonyl bond and presumably 22 first forms a transient tetrahedral intermediate then forms a quaternary acylammonium salt by the displacement of the leaving group This quaternary acylammonium salt is more susceptible to attack by alcohols or other nucleophiles nbsp dd dd The use of two phases aqueous for amine organic for acyl chloride is called the Schotten Baumann reaction This approach is used in the preparation of nylon via the so called nylon rope trick 23 Conversion to ketones edit Carbon nucleophiles such as Grignard reagents convert acyl chlorides to ketones which in turn are susceptible to the attack by second equivalent to yield the tertiary alcohol The reaction of acyl halides with certain organocadmium reagents stops at the ketone stage 24 The reaction with Gilman reagents also afford ketones reflecting the low nucleophilicity of these lithium diorganocopper compounds 14 Reduction edit Acyl chlorides are reduced by lithium aluminium hydride and diisobutylaluminium hydride to give primary alcohols Lithium tri tert butoxyaluminium hydride a bulky hydride donor reduces acyl chlorides to aldehydes as does the Rosenmund reduction using hydrogen gas over a poisoned palladium catalyst 25 nbsp The Rosenmund reductionAcylation of arenes edit With Lewis acid catalysts like ferric chloride or aluminium chloride acyl chlorides participate in Friedel Crafts acylations to give aryl ketones 12 14 nbsp Because of the harsh conditions and the reactivity of the intermediates this otherwise quite useful reaction tends to be messy as well as environmentally unfriendly Oxidative addition edit Acyl chlorides react with low valent metal centers to give transition metal acyl complexes Illustrative is the oxidative addition of acetyl chloride to Vaska s complex converting square planar Ir I to octahedral Ir III 26 IrCl CO PPh3 2 CH3COCl CH3COIrCl2 CO PPh3 2 displaystyle ce IrCl CO PPh3 2 CH3COCl gt CH3COIrCl2 CO PPh3 2 nbsp Hazards editLow molecular weight acyl chlorides are often lachrymators and they react violently with water alcohols and amines References edit Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry R 5 7 6 Acid halides Sih John C 2001 04 15 Formyl Chloride in John Wiley amp Sons Ltd ed Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis John Wiley amp Sons Ltd doi 10 1002 047084289x rf026 ISBN 9780471936237 Richard O C Norman James M Coxon 16 September 1993 Principles of Organic Synthesis 3rd Edition CRC Press p 371 ISBN 978 0 7487 6162 3 Wang Hong Yong Xie Min Hao Luo Shi Neng Zou Pei Liu Ya Ling 2009 3 5 Dinitrobenzoyl chloride Acta Crystallographica Section E 65 10 o2460 doi 10 1107 S1600536809036228 PMC 2970283 PMID 21577915 US patent 5672749 Phillip R DeVrou W Bryan Waites Robert E Young Process for preparing acetyl chloride Samel Ulf Rainer Kohler Walter Gamer Armin Otto Keuser Ullrich 2005 Propionic acid and derivatives Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a22 223 ISBN 978 3527306732 Maki Takao Takeda Kazuo 2002 Benzoic acid and derivatives Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a03 555 ISBN 978 3527306732 Helferich B Schaefer W 1929 n Butyrl chloride Organic Syntheses 9 32 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 009 0032 a b c Martin Ansell 1972 Preparation of acyl halides In Saul Patai ed Acyl Halides PATAI S Chemistry of Functional Groups pp 35 68 doi 10 1002 9780470771273 ch2 ISBN 9780470771273 a b c Clayden Jonathan 2001 Organic chemistry Oxford Oxford University Press pp 276 296 ISBN 0 19 850346 6 J S Pizey Synthetic Reagents Vol 1 Halsted Press New York 1974 a b Allen C F H Barker W E 1932 Desoxybenzoin Organic Syntheses 12 16 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 012 0016 Adams Roger 1923 p Nitrobenzoyl Chloride Organic Syntheses 3 75 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 003 0075 a b c d Boyd Robert W Morrison Robert 1992 Organic Chemistry Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall pp 666 762 ISBN 0 13 643669 2 L P Kyrides 1940 Fumaryl Chloride Organic Syntheses 20 51 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 020 0051 Triphenylphosphine carbon tetrachloride Taschner Michael J e EROS Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis 2001 K Venkataraman D R Wagle 1979 Cyanuric chloride a useful reagent for converting carboxylic acids into chlorides esters amides and peptides Tetrahedron Lett 20 32 3037 3040 doi 10 1016 S0040 4039 00 71006 9 Sonntag Norman O V 1953 04 01 The Reactions of Aliphatic Acid Chlorides Chemical Reviews 52 2 237 416 doi 10 1021 cr60162a001 ISSN 0009 2665 Bentley T William Llewellyn Gareth McAlister J Anthony January 1996 SN2 Mechanism for Alcoholysis Aminolysis and Hydrolysis of Acetyl Chloride The Journal of Organic Chemistry 61 22 7927 7932 doi 10 1021 jo9609844 ISSN 0022 3263 PMID 11667754 C H Bamford and C F H Tipper Comprehensive Chemical Kinetics Ester Formation and Hydrolysis and Related Reactions Elsevier Amsterdam 1972 Fox Joseph M Dmitrenko Olga Liao Lian an Bach Robert D October 2004 Computational Studies of Nucleophilic Substitution at Carbonyl Carbon the S N 2 Mechanism versus the Tetrahedral Intermediate in Organic Synthesis The Journal of Organic Chemistry 69 21 7317 7328 doi 10 1021 jo049494z ISSN 0022 3263 PMID 15471486 Hubbard Patricia Brittain William J February 1998 Mechanism of Amine Catalyzed Ester Formation from an Acid Chloride and Alcohol The Journal of Organic Chemistry 63 3 677 683 doi 10 1021 jo9716643 ISSN 0022 3263 PMID 11672060 Morgan Paul W Kwolek Stephanie L April 1959 The nylon rope trick Demonstration of condensation polymerization Journal of Chemical Education 36 4 182 Bibcode 1959JChEd 36 182M doi 10 1021 ed036p182 ISSN 0021 9584 David A Shirley 2011 The Synthesis of Ketones from Acid Halides and Organometallic Compounds of Magnesium Zinc and Cadmium Org Reactions 28 58 doi 10 1002 0471264180 or008 02 ISBN 978 0471264187 William Reusch Carboxylic Acid Derivatives VirtualText of Organic Chemistry Michigan State University Archived from the original on 2016 05 16 Retrieved 2009 02 19 Hartwig John 2010 Organotransition Metal Chemistry From Bonding to Catalysis New York University Science Books p 1160 ISBN 978 1 938787 15 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Acyl chloride amp oldid 1207464986, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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