Hello, my name is Mark and I've been refreshing my organic chemistry knowledge lately and after reading about carboxylic acids derivatives and their reactions i stumbled upon something that got my attention. So basically the most reactive species of carboxylic acid derivatives are obviously their acyl halides. So lets focus on the most common one - The chloride. There are plenty of ways to form them from which the most common are reactions with thionyl chloride (SOCl
2), phosphorus(III) chloride (PCl
3), phosphorus(V) chloride (PCl
5) or little bit more exotic oxalyl chloride (C
2O
2Cl
2). The reaction with SOCl
2 is quite simple reaction in which SO
2 and HCl are evolved as side products. In the reaction with PCl
5, the POCl
3 and HCl are evolved, and in the reaction with PCl
3 only H
3PO
4 is evolved. The oxalyl chloride reaction is also catalyzed by addition of little bit of DMF that forms imidolyl chloride intermediate products like in the Vilsmeier–Haack reaction reaction with POCl
3. But in some of the articles that i've read i saw that POCl
3 can be also used as a chlorinating agent in carboxylic acid conversion to acyl chlorides. From what i know, POCl
3 is used mainly in alcohol dehydratation reactions and generally in the E2 elimination reactions, not to mention that it is also a side product of using PCl
5, but in those paperworks, to be exact:
Christian A. G. N. Montalbetti* and Virginie Falque
Amide bond formation and peptide coupling Tetrahedron report number 740
ROGER ADAMS,O. KAMM, C. S. MARVEL
Organic Chemical Reagents UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Vol. XVI June 23, 1919 No. 43
POCl
3 is mentioned as a chlorinating agent. There is really no other paperworks that i could find that mention POCl
3 as a chlorinating agent.
So my wonder is what is the mechanism of the reaction and when would it be favoured over the common ones.
Moreover in this paperwork from 1919 there is a quite interesting result. The synthesis of acetyl chloride was carried by refluxing sodium acetate with POCl
3 The most interesting thing is that in the article there is mentioned that
The acetyl chloride which is thus obtained, is
very much superior to the acetyl chloride formed by the action of
phosphorus trichloride upon acetic acid.
and also
The acetyl chloride as it is formed is so pure that by using a
fractionating column on the original reaction mixture flask, pure
acetyl chloride may be distilled directly and no redistillation is
required.
I couldnt find any reaction mechanism for the reaction of chlorinatin carboxylic acids with POCl
3 so i made one myself (analogue to the SOCl
2 method):
Is this a valid mechanism ? If not then what is the real mechanism ? Is it similiar to the imidolyl chloride intermediate formation ? As it was mentioned in the
Amide bond formation and peptide coupling paperwork, so maybe it forms intermediate product with amines and acyl chloride forms only in the presence of amines ?
Greetings