Here is a thought
The tetramer of acetaldehyde is readily available. Metaldehyde is the tetramer, paraldehyde the trimer (nasty shit, really, really nasty stuff, its in
some of my physician's books dating back from the 1700s as a sedative-hypnotic. My advice is not to try it, you will thank yourself. Its awful in
vivo, it stinks and it eats some plastics, not sure which will resist it, but like chlormethiazole, its quite aggressive towards plastics vulnerable
to it)
Metaldehyde is the active ingredient in slug pellets. Slugs ingest or absorb it through skin contact and its transformed in vivo to acetaldehyde which
poisons the molluscs in question.
Two ideas-attempting depolymerization with either conc. or dilute sulfuric acid. Or thermal depolymerization. I'll give it a try, since I've a large
tub of slug pellets in the lab courtesy of meaning to try exactly that. I won't use them on the garden, since it would poison other creatures eating
the dead slug/snails, and in any case, I'd sooner they eat the plants than kill them.
First, I'll try a simple thermal depolymerization of powdered slug pellets in an alembic leading any vapours into an ice-diethylene glycol/CaCl2 bath
cooled collection vessel and see what happens. If no luck, then will try addition of a little sulfuric. Anybody know if acetaldehyde attacks plastics?
Should be easy to separate acetaldehyde from any paralydehyde, since the BP of the latter is 124'C |