The general procedure for the synthesis of L-menthol, sodium L-lactate and (S)-(1R,2S,5R)-2-isopropyl-5-methylcyclohexyl 2-hydroxypropionate from compound (CAS:923031-01-0) and compound (CAS:923031-02-1) is as follows:
1. Preparation of L-lactic acid L-menthyl ester (ML) by esterification reaction:
- In a three-necked flask equipped with a Barrett trap, reflux condenser, thermocouple, heating jacket and magnetic stirrer, L-menthol (1440 g), L-(+)-lactic acid (2880 g, an aqueous solution of 88% lactic acid from Purac, HS-88 grade) and heptane (720 g) were added.
- The mixture was stirred and refluxed and the resulting water was periodically drained from the trap.
- After 32 hours, the reaction was stopped when 854 mL of the aqueous phase was collected and the temperature of the mixture rose to 128 °C. The reaction was stopped by a gas chromatograph.
- After cooling to room temperature, the reaction mixture was analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography (GC), which showed the presence of 5.4% unreacted menthol, 67.7% ML, 0.6% propanedioate, 24.6% L-lactoyl-L-lactide (MLL), and 4-butyl L-lactoyl-L-lactoyl-L-lactic acid (MLLL).
2. Controlled hydrolysis:
- Dilute the esterified product with water (4230 g) and heptane (960 g).
- A 50% aqueous sodium hydroxide solution (809 g) was added dropwise over 30 minutes while stirring and cooling (cold water bath), keeping the temperature not exceeding 30 °C and pH not exceeding 12.9.
- After the dropwise addition, stirring was continued for 20 min. the GC analysis showed almost complete conversion of MLL to ML.
- The organic layer was separated and washed with 1.5% aqueous lactic acid (1000 g) and azeotroped to remove water.
- The solvent (heptane) was evaporated and the residue was fractionated under vacuum to give three fractions: fraction 1 (100 g, 94.5% menthol and 2.0% ML), fraction 2 (111 g, 46.8% menthol and 51.8% ML), and fraction 3 (1860 g, 99.5% pure ML).
- The overall yield of ML was 91% based on the initial menthol, and the yield of purified ML was 98% based on the reacted menthol.
3. Sulfuric acid-catalyzed esterification and controlled hydrolysis:
- The esterification reaction was carried out using L-menthol (1000 g), L-(+)-lactic acid (1000 g), heptane (500 g) and concentrated sulfuric acid (6 g).
- After 2 hours, 300mL of the aqueous phase was collected and the temperature of the mixture was raised to 119°C.
- After cooling GC analysis showed the presence of 6.4% unreacted menthol, 57.6% ML, 0.4% propylenol, 32.2% MLL and 1.9% MLLL.
- The controlled hydrolysis step was performed with water (800 g) and heptane (500 mL) to dilute the esterification product, and 50% aqueous sodium hydroxide (204 g) was added dropwise over 70 min, keeping the temperature to no more than 30 °C and the pH to no more than 13.1.
- The organic layer was separated and further diluted with water (1350 g) and 50% aqueous sodium hydroxide solution (150 g) was added dropwise over 1 hour.
- After stirring for 1 h, GC analysis showed almost complete conversion of MLL to ML.
- The organic layers were separated, washed and combined, the solvents were evaporated, and vacuum fractionation yielded three fractions: fraction 1 (203 g, 87.1% menthol, 3.5% ML, and 6.2% menthol), fraction 2 (96.8 g, 57.2% menthol and 41.6% ML), and fraction 3 (2356 g, 99.4% pure ML).
- The overall yield of ML was 81% based on the initial menthol, and the yield of purified ML was 91% based on the reacted menthol.
4. Controlled hydrolysis (normal addition mode):
- In a 500-mL flask, crude ML (88.7 g) was mixed with water (89 g) and heptane (20 g) at a constant temperature to the test temperature.
- Under stirring, 50% aqueous sodium hydroxide (35.5 g) was added gradually over 0.6-3.6 h. The pH was recorded periodically.
- After the addition was completed, stirring was done until the GC peak of the MLL dropped below 1%.
5. Reverse addition:
- A 50% aqueous sodium hydroxide solution (35.5 g) was added to a 500-mL flask and thermostated to the test temperature.
- The esterification mixture was gradually added to the aqueous alkali solution with stirring and the pH change was recorded.
- This method is not effective at pH 14 or above.