Methoxyacetic acid


Methoxyacetic 'acid' is the organic compound with the formula. It can be viewed as a derivative of acetic acid in which a hydrogen atom of the methyl group is replaced by a methoxy group. As indicated by the synonym methyl glycolic acid, and as the simplest ether carboxylic acid, methoxyacetic acid can be understood as a methyl ether of glycolic acid.

Production

In principle the compound can be prepared by reaction of sodium methoxide with monochloroacetic acid. The industrial route involves the oxidation of 2-methoxyethanol with air or oxygen in the presence of platinum catalysts.
In both humans and animals, 2-methoxyacetic acid forms via the rapid oxidation of 2-methoxyethanol by the action of alcohol dehydrogenases.

Properties

Methoxyacetic acid is a colorless, viscous, and corrosive liquid with a pungent odor which, at 7 °C, freezes to a mass similar to glacial acetic acid. Due to the low solvation energy of its methoxy group, methoxyacetic acid, with a pKa value of 3.57, is more acidic than acetic acid and glycolic acid.
Ultra-pure methoxyacetic acid can be obtained via the multistep crystallization of the raw distillate, which is free of acid contaminations.

Applications

Methoxyacetic acid is a precursor to two commercial fungicides, oxadixyl and mefenoxam.

Former applications

Due to its reprotoxic properties, earlier consumer and industrial applications of methoxyacetic acid as a disinfectant, biocide, or as a cleaner for the decalcification of surfaces are now obsolete. The same is true for substances such as the solvent 2-methoxyethanol or the PVC plasticizer bis(2-methoxyethyl) phthalate, which are metabolized to methoxyacetic acid.

Safety

Due to its considerable reprotoxic potential, methoxyacetic acid has been adopted into the list of SVHC substances and is only registered as an intermediate product for industrial purposes under strictly controlled conditions.
In laboratory tests, methoxyacetic acid inhibits the growth of tumor cells.