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Acylation
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In chemistry , acylation (rarely, but more formally: alkanoylation ) is the process of adding an acyl group to a compound. The compound providing the acyl group is called the acylating agent . These are used to form aryl ketones.
Because they form a strong electrophile when treated with some metal catalysts , acyl halides are commonly used as acylating agents. For example, Friedel-Crafts acylation uses acetyl chloride (ethanoyl chloride), C H 3 C O Cl , as the agent and aluminum chloride (AlCl3 ) as a catalyst to add an ethanoyl(acetyl ) group to benzene :
The mechanism of this reaction is electrophilic substitution .
Acyl halides and anhydrides of carboxylic acids are also commonly used acylating agents to acylate amines to form amides or acylate alcohols to form esters . The amines and alcohols are nucleophiles ; the mechanism is nucleophilic addition-elimination. Succinic acid is also commonly used in a specific type of acylation called succination . Oversuccination occurs when more than one succinate adds to a single compound. An industrial example of acylation in the synthesis of aspirin , in which salicylic acid is acylated by acetic anhydride .
Mechanism of Friedel Crafts:
See also
References