oxoaldehydes
Oxoaldehydes are organic compounds that combine an aldehyde group with one or more additional carbonyl groups within the same molecule. The term covers simple dialdehydes, where two aldehyde groups are present, as well as alpha-oxoaldehydes, in which a ketone carbonyl lies adjacent to an aldehyde. Representative examples include glyoxal (ethanedial), the smallest dialdehyde; malondialdehyde (1,3-propanedial); glutaraldehyde (pentanedial); and methylglyoxal (2-oxopropanal).
Occurrence and production: glyoxal is produced commercially by oxidation of ethylene glycol and occurs as a
Properties and reactivity: the presence of multiple carbonyl groups makes oxoaldehydes highly reactive toward nucleophiles. They
Applications and safety: oxoaldehydes are used as crosslinkers in polymer resins, paper and textile processing, and