Oxidation of diethylene glycol with concentrated nitric acid was described by A. Wurtz in 1861 In parallel, W. Heintz reported the synthesis of diglycolic acid from chloroacetic acid by heating with sodium hydroxide solution. In a version with barium hydroxide solution as an alkaline medium, diglycolic acid is obtained in 68% yield after acidification. The yields of the described reactions are unsatisfactory for use on a technical scale. The single-stage nitric acid process gives even in the presence of an oxidation catalyst yields of only 58-60%. In a multi-stage process of nitric acid oxidation at 70 °C and multiple crystallization steps, evaporation of the residues and return of the diethylene glycol-containing mother liquor, product yields of up to 99% can be achieved. The oxidation of diethylene glycol with air, oxygen or ozone avoids the use of expensive nitric acid and prevents the inevitable formation of nitrous gases. In the presence of a platinum catalyst, yields of 90% can be obtained by air oxidation. On a bismuth platinum contact catalyst, yields of 95% are to be achieved under optimized reaction conditions. The oxidation of 1,4-dioxan-2-one is also described with yields of up to 75%.
Properties
Diglycolic acid is readily water soluble and crystallizes from water in monoclinic prisms as a white, odorless solid. At an air humidity of more than 72% and 25 °C the monohydrate is formed. The commercial product is the anhydrous form as a free-flowing flakes.
Application
Diesters of diglycolic acid with higher alcohols can be used as softeners for polyvinyl chloride with comparable properties as di-n-octyl phthalate. Basic solutions of diglycolic acid are described for the removal of limescale deposits in gas and oil bores, as well as in systems such as heat exchangers or steam boilers. Diglycolic acid can be used as a diester component in homo- and copolymeric polyesters which are biocompatible and biodegradable and can be used alone or in blends with aliphatic polyesters as tissue adhesives, cartilage substitutes or as implant materials: