To a cold solution of
160 g. (4 moles) of sodium hydroxide in 500 cc. of water in a
2-l. round-bottomed flask provided with a
mechanical stirrer is added slowly
250 g. (3.5 moles) of ethylene cyanohydrin (p. 256), the temperature being kept below 30° (Note
1) by means of a
cold water bath. The mixture is allowed to stand overnight in the bath, when the flask is fitted with a
two-holed rubber stopper bearing a
capillary tube reaching almost to the bottom and a
delivery tube bent slightly downward for attachment to a
suction pump. The flask is then heated slowly to 80° during four hours by raising the temperature of the surrounding water. A rapid current of air is drawn through the mixture during the heating. The mixture is now evaporated to dryness under reduced pressure by heating in an
oil bath, the temperature of which is raised as rapidly as the boiling of the material will permit. The oil bath is finally held at 125° until the product becomes pasty. The flask is allowed to cool, and 50 cc. of water is poured down one side of the flask, and the solid material at that point worked carefully into a paste with a
stout stirring rod.
A cooled mixture of
200 g. (109 cc.) of concentrated sulfuric acid (2 moles) and 300 cc. of water is now added slowly with careful cooling (Note
2), the pasty mixture being stirred with a
thermometer and the temperature not being allowed to rise above 35°.
Sodium sulfate crystallizes during this addition. The mass is now shaken vigorously with
400 cc. of ether and allowed to stand for some minutes. The ether is then decanted as completely as possible and the residue filtered with suction. The
sodium sulfate is now shaken with six successive
300-cc. portions of ether, the ether solutions being subsequently employed for extraction of the filtrate. This latter requires 10–14 such extractions (each with
300–400 cc. of ether) for the satisfactory extraction of the
β-hydroxypropionic acid. The combined ethereal solution is dried over
50 g. of anhydrous sodium sulfate and the ether distilled from a water bath, the temperature of which is not allowed to rise above 50°. The product is then concentrated under reduced pressure from a water bath maintained at
55–60°. The residue should have attained constant weight after four to six hours of this treatment; it consists of a sirupy liquid of pale straw color which contains
75–80 per cent of
β-hydroxypropionic acid (by titration) (Note
3). The yield is
120–125 g. (
28–31 per cent of the theoretical amount).