Acyl chlorides are a subset of acyl halides and undergo many of the chemical reactions mentioned under acyl halide. A specific example of an acyl chloride is acetyl chloride (IUPAC name: ethanoyl chloride) CH3COCl.
For example:
Acyl chlorides must also be reacted in anhydrous conditions to prevent the hydrolysis of acyl chloride by the moisture in the air.
With carbon nucleophiles such as Grignard reagents, acyl chlorides generally react first to the ketone and then with a second equivalent to the tertiary alcohol. A notable exception is the reaction of acyl halides with certain organocadmium reagents which stops at the ketone stage. Acid chlorides of aromatic acids are generally less reactive those of alkyl acids and thus somewhat more rigorous conditions are required for reaction.
Because acyl chlorides are such reactive compounds, they are generally toxic and special precautions should be taken while handling them. They are lachrymatory chemicals because they can react with water at the surface of the eye producing hydrochloric and organic acids irritating to the eye. Similar problems can result if one inhales acyl chloride vapors.
Acyl chlorides are often prepared by reacting a carboxylic acid with thionyl chloride, in most cases a couple of drops of N,N'-Dimethylformamide are added to catalyse the reaction.
The sulfur dioxide (SO2) and hydrogen chloride (HCl) generated are both gases which can leave the reaction vessel, driving the reaction forward. They are also both toxic gases.
Acyl chlorides can also be prepared using certain phosphorus chloride reagents such as phosphorus trichloride or phosphorus pentachloride: