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Allyl chloride: Carcinogenic Potency Database potency.berkeley.edu | CHOLINE CHLORIDE - Liquid Choline Chloride by Vitamin Research lifeextensionvitamins.com |
Allyl chloride is the organic compound with the formula CH2=CHCH2Cl. This colorless liquid is insoluble in water but soluble in common organic solvents. It is mainly converted to epichlorohydrin, used in the production of plastics. It features an alkene group next to, or "allylic to", a chloro methyl group.
[edit] ProductionAllyl chloride is prepared by the reaction of propylene with chlorine. At lower temperatures, the main product is 1,2-dichloropropane, but at 500 °C, allyl chloride predominates, being formed via a free radical reaction:
An estimated 800M kg are produced in this way annually.[1] [edit] Reactions and usesThe great majority of allyl chloride is converted to epichlorohydrin.[1] In the laboratory, allyl chloride is a common alkylating agent, useful in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals and pesticides. Illustrative of its reactivity include its cyanation to allyl cyanide (CH2=CHCH2CN),[2] reductive coupling to give diallyl, oxidative addition to palladium to give allylpalladium chloride dimer, (C3H5)2Pd2Cl2, and dehydrohalogenation to cyclopropene. Commercially significant derivatives include allyl alcohol, allylamine, allyl isothiocyanate (synthetic mustard oil)[1] and allylsilane. [edit] SafetyAllyl chloride is highly toxic and flammable. [edit] References
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