redfox Posted May 18, 2007 Posted May 18, 2007 Ok, am at a reealy basic level of chemistry...I need to react C6H5C=OOH with SOCl2. I don't know where to begin as I'm not sure what would go where, and if anything would be bumped off and what would be left over. I don't just want the answer to this question as I need to do quite a few like it, but I need to know how it's done, what the rules are, etc. I would look it up but I don't know what it's called! Can I please get some advice on where to begin/where online is a good tutorial site/what this 'reaction method' is called? Ta very much:)
ecoli Posted May 18, 2007 Posted May 18, 2007 The reaction between benzoic acid and thionyl chloride produces an acid chloride. Look up the formation of an acid chloride derivative from a carboxylic acid.
redfox Posted May 18, 2007 Author Posted May 18, 2007 Ok, thanks for reply. How do I know what will be substituted/added for other questions tho? Are there some general rules for this?
ecoli Posted May 18, 2007 Posted May 18, 2007 There is one general way to prepare them: R-COOH + SOCl2 → R-COCl + SO2 + HCl The SO2 and HCl are both gases, so this is a pretty good way to isolate just the acid chloride (AKA acyl chloride). The gases that leave drive the reaction to the right. This is the mechanism http://www.usm.maine.edu/~newton/Chy251_253/Lectures/CarboxylicAcids/CarboxylicAcids.html Here's another, less common, preparation method. R-COOH + PCl5 → R-COCl + POCl3 + HCl
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