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Mesoxalic acid

Mesoxalic acid[1]
Structural formula
Ball-and-stick model
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
Oxopropanedioic acid
Other names
Ketomalonic acid
Oxomalonic acid
α-Ketomalonic acid
2-Oxopropanedioic acid
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
ChEBI
ChemSpider
DrugBank
ECHA InfoCard 100.006.796 Edit this at Wikidata
KEGG
UNII
  • InChI=1S/C3H2O5/c4-1(2(5)6)3(7)8/h(H,5,6)(H,7,8) checkY
    Key: XEEVLJKYYUVTRC-UHFFFAOYSA-N checkY
  • InChI=1/C3H2O5/c4-1(2(5)6)3(7)8/h(H,5,6)(H,7,8)
    Key: XEEVLJKYYUVTRC-UHFFFAOYAW
  • O=C(O)C(=O)C(=O)O
Properties
C3H2O5
Molar mass 118.045 g/mol
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
checkY verify (what is checkY☒N ?)

Mesoxalic acid, also called oxomalonic acid or ketomalonic acid, is an organic compound with formula C3H2O5 or HO−(C=O)3−OH.

Mesoxalic acid is both a dicarboxylic acid and a ketonic acid. It readily loses two protons to yield the divalent anion C3O2−5, called mesoxalate, oxomalonate, or ketomalonate. These terms are also used for salts containing this anion, such as sodium mesoxalate, Na2C3O5; and for esters containing the −C3O5− or −O−(C=O)3−O− moiety, such as diethyl mesoxalate, (C2H5)2C3O5. Mesoxalate is one of the oxocarbon anions, which (like carbonate CO2−3 and oxalate C2O2−4) consist solely of carbon and oxygen.

Mesoxalic acid readily absorbs and reacts with water to form a product commonly called "mesoxalic acid monohydrate", more properly dihydroxymalonic acid, HO−(C=O)−C(OH)2−(C=O)−OH.[2] In product catalogs and other contexts, the terms "mesoxalic acid", "oxomalonic acid" and so on often refer to this "hydrated" compound. In particular, the product traded as "sodium mesoxalate monohydrate" is almost always sodium dihydroxymalonate.

Synthesis

Mesoxalic acid can be obtained synthetically by hydrolysis of alloxan with baryta water,[2] by warming caffuric acid[3] with lead acetate solution,[2] or from glyceryl diacetate and concentrated nitric acid in ice-cold water. The product can be obtained also by oxidation of tartronic acid[4] or glycerol.[5] Since they are carried out in water, these procedures generally give the dihydroxy derivative.

It is also prepared by the oxidation of glycerol with the help of bismuth(III) nitrate.

See also

References

  1. ^ Merck Index (12th ed.). p. 5971.
  2. ^ a b c Henry Enfield Roscoe (1888), A Treatise on Chemistry, volume 3, part2 Organic Chemistry, p. 161. D. Appleton and Co., New York
  3. ^ The chemical structure of caffuric acid was given in Allen, W. F. (1932). The preparation and pyrolytic molecular rearrangment [sic] of the 8-ethers of caffeine: And their conversion to 8-methyl and 8-ethylcaffeine. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Edwards Brothers.
  4. ^ Rosaria Ciriminna and Mario Pagliaro (2004), Oxidation of tartronic acid and dihydroxyacetone to sodium mesoxalate mediated by TEMPO. Tetrahedron Letters, volume 45, issue 34, pp. 6381–6383 doi:10.1016/j.tetlet.2004.07.021
  5. ^ Rosaria Ciriminna and Mario Pagliaro (2003), One-Pot Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Oxidation of Glycerol to Ketomalonic Acid Mediated by TEMPO. Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis, volume 345, issue 3, Pages 383–388. doi:10.1002/adsc.200390043