Lactide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chemical structure of lactide.
Enlarge
Chemical structure of lactide.

Lactide is the cyclic di-ester of lactic acid, i.e., 2-hydroxypropionic acid. Lactic acid can not form a lactone as other hydroxy acids do because the hydroxy group is too close to the carboxylic group. Instead, lactic acid first forms a dimer, which is similar to a 5-hydroxyacid. The dimer contains an hydroxy group at a convenient distance from the carboxylic group for the formation of a lactone. Indeed, the dimer readily forms a six-membered cyclic diester known as lactide.

In general, a lactide is the cyclic diester, i.e., the di-lactone of two molecules of any 2-hydroxycarboxylic acid. It can be polymerized to polylactide using suitable catalysts, with either syndiotactic or a heterotactic stereocontrol, to give materials with many useful properties.


In other languages