EDDS
Ethylenediamine-N,''N
Structure and properties
EDDS has two chiral centers, and as such three stereoisomers. These are the enantiomeric and isomers and the achiral meso isomer. As a biodegradable replacement for EDTA, only the stereoisomer is of interest. The and stereoisomers are less biodegradable, whereas the stereoisomer has been shown to be very effectively biodegraded even in highly polluted soils.Synthesis
EDDS was first synthesized from maleic acid and ethylenediamine. Some microorganisms have been manipulated for industrial-scale synthesis of -EDDS from ethylenediamine and fumaric acid or maleic acid, which proceeds as follows:From aspartic acid
-EDDS is produced stereospecifically by the alkylation of an ethylenedibromide with L-aspartic acid. Racemic EDDS is produced by the reaction of ethylenediamine with fumaric acid or maleic acid.Coordination chemistry
[Image:M(edds)showing NHs.svg|Structure of a generic octahedral complex of EDDS|130px|left|thumb]In comparing the effectiveness of -EDDS versus EDTA as chelating agents for iron(III):
| Formation reaction | Formation constant |
| 3+ + -EDDS4− → Fe− + 6 H2O | KEDDS = 1020.6 |
| 3+ + EDTA4− → Fe− + 6 H2O | KEDTA = 1025.1 |
Because of the lower stability for −, the useful range being roughly 3<pH-EDDS<9 and 2
Another comparison that can be made between -EDDS and EDTA is the structure of the chelated complex. EDTA’s six donor sites form five five-membered chelate rings around the metal ion, four NC2OFe rings and one C2N2Fe ring. The C2N2Fe ring and two of NC2OFe rings define a plane, and two NC2OFe rings are perpendicular to the plane that contains the C2-symmetry axis. The five-membered rings are slightly strained. EDDS’s six donor sites form both five- and six-membered chelate rings around the metal ion: two NC2OFe rings, two NC3OFe rings, and one C2N2Fe ring. Studies of the crystal structure of the Fe− complex show that the two five-membered NC3OFe rings project out of the plane of the complex, reducing the equatorial ring strain that exists in the Fe− complex. The complex also has C2 symmetry.