The production of dimethylcarbamoyl chloride from
phosgene and
dimethylamine was reported as early as 1879 (reported as "Dimethylharnstoffchlorid" – dimethylurea chloride). : DMCC can be produced in high yields (90%) at 275 °C by reacting phosgene with gaseous dimethylamine in a
flow reactor. To suppress the formation of ureas, excess phosgene is used (in a 3:1 ratio). The reaction can also be carried out at the laboratory scale with
diphosgene or
triphosgene and an aqueous dimethylamine solution in the two-phase system of
benzene–
xylene and water in a stirred reactor with
sodium hydroxide as an acid scavenger. However, considerably lower yields (56%) are achieved due to the hydrolysis sensitivity of DMCC. Dimethylcarbamoyl chloride is also formed (together with
methyl chloride) when reacting phosgene with
trimethylamine. : A more recent process is based on chlorodimethylamine, which is converted practically quantitatively to dimethylcarbamoyl chloride on a
palladium catalyst under pressure with
carbon monoxide at
room temperature. : DMCC can also be formed in small amounts (up to 20 ppm) from
dimethylformamide (DMF) in the
Vilsmeier–Haack reaction or when DMF is used as a catalyst in the reaction of
carboxylic acids with
thionyl chloride to the corresponding
acyl chloride. : The tendency towards DMCC formation depends on the chlorination reagent (
thionyl chloride >
oxalyl chloride >
phosphorus oxychloride) and is higher in the presence of a
base. However, dicarbamoyl chloride
hydrolyses very quickly to dimethylamine,
hydrochloric acid and
carbon dioxide (with a
half-life of about 6 minutes at 0 °C) so that less than 3 ppm of dicarbamoyl chloride is found in the Vilsmeier product after aqueous workup. ==Properties==