Nucleophilic acyl substitution is a type of substitution reaction between nucleophiles and acyl compounds. Acyl compounds are carboxylic acid derivatives such as esters, amides and acid halides. Nucleophiles are a diverse group of reactive intermediates such as alkoxide compounds and enolates.
Acyl substitution is basically a two-step nucleophilic addition and elimination reaction. Both reaction steps are reversible reactions and the process can in principle revert. The relative strength of both nucleophilic species determines the reaction outcome but in practical reactions the leaving group is by far the poorest nucleophile.
The Baker-Venkataraman rearrangement is a nucleophilic acyl substitution used in the synthesis of flavones. In the Weinreb ketone synthesis ketones are synthesized from carboxylic acid precursors. An unusual intramolecular acyl substitution is the Chan rearrangement.
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