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Acyl
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Acyl" .
An acyl group (IUPAC name: alkanoyl ) is a functional group derived by the removal of one or more hydroxyl group from an oxoacid .[1] . In organic chemistry , the acyl group is usually derived from a carboxylic acid of the form RC O OH . It therefore has the formula RC (=O )-, with a double bond between the carbon and oxygen atoms (i.e. a carbonyl group ), and a single bond between R and the carbon. Acyl groups can also be derived from other types of acids such as sulfonic acids , phosphonic acids , and some others.
Acyl halides can be used in Friedel-Crafts acylation to introduce the acyl moiety in an aromatic compound .
In biochemistry , acyl CoAs are derivates of fatty acid metabolism, with acetyl CoA as an example. They are actually thiol esters .
Examples
The names of acyl groups are typically derived from the corresponding acid by substituting the acid ending -ic with the ending -yl as shown in the table below. Note that methyl , ethyl , propyl , butyl etc. end in -yl are not acyl but alkyl groups, derived from alkanes .
Acyl species
In acyloxy groups the acyl group is bonded to oxygen: R-C=O-O-R' where R-C=O is the acyl group.
Acylium ions are cations of the type R-C+ =O and play an important role as intermediates in organic reactions [1] for example the Hayashi rearrangement .
References
See also