Acyl chlorides: Difference between revisions

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Added the references correctly, that is, I added them as explained in the lecture.
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&nbsp;In organic chemistry, an acyl chloride is a molecule with the functional group -COCl. Acyl chlorides are described as acid derivitives, that is, -Cl is in place of -OH that would be seen in carboxylic acid compounds. They do not dissolve in water because they react with it via a&nbsp;[[Nucleophilic-addition-elimination|nucleophillic-addition-elimination]] reaction to give its acid derivative and HCl. <ref>© Jim Clark 2004 (modified December 2015) https://www.chemguide.co.uk/organicprops/acylchlorides/background.html Date accessed:05/12/17</ref>
In organic chemistry, an acyl chloride is a [[molecule|molecule]] with the functional group -COCl. Acyl chlorides are described as acid derivitives, that is, -Cl is in place of -OH that would be seen in [[carboxylic acid|carboxylic acid]] [[Compound|compounds]]. They do not dissolve in [[water|water]] because they react with it via a&nbsp;[[Nucleophilic-addition-elimination|nucleophillic-addition-elimination]] reaction to give its acid derivative and [[HCl|HCl]]<ref>© Jim Clark 2004 (modified December 2015) https://www.chemguide.co.uk/organicprops/acylchlorides/background.html Date accessed:05/12/17</ref>.
 
=== References ===
 
<references />

Revision as of 15:03, 5 December 2017

In organic chemistry, an acyl chloride is a molecule with the functional group -COCl. Acyl chlorides are described as acid derivitives, that is, -Cl is in place of -OH that would be seen in carboxylic acid compounds. They do not dissolve in water because they react with it via a nucleophillic-addition-elimination reaction to give its acid derivative and HCl[1].

References

  1. © Jim Clark 2004 (modified December 2015) https://www.chemguide.co.uk/organicprops/acylchlorides/background.html Date accessed:05/12/17