Chemistry of Essential Oils

(Tuis.) #1

170 THE CHEMISTRY OF ESSENTIAL OILS


The constants of the oils distilled from these several lots were :—

Specific Gravity at 15°.
Rotation .....
Solubility in 85 per Cent. Alcohol
80
75
Saponification Value
,, ,, after Acetylation

By careful fractionation they separated a body having the following,
characters :—
Boiling-point
Specific gravity at 23°
Rotatory power
Solubility in 70 per cent, alcohol
65
60

158° to 159° at 20 mm.
1-0378
-6°
1 in. 1-6
2-7
„ 6-5
This body, which is termed marionol, combines with sodium withi
evolution of hydrogen, and is probably a tertiary alcohol. On adding
to 10 grms. marionol dissolved in 10 grms. petroleum spirit, 1 grm. of
sodium, a brisk evolution of hydrogen takes place in the cold. On
warming over a water-bath solution is complete in the course of a day.

OIL OF CALIFORNIAN BAY.

The leaves of the so-called Californian Bay, a large forest tree
common on the mountains of California and the Pacific slope, yield
from 2



  • 5 to 5'5 per cent, of an essential oil. The tree is also known as
    the mountain laurel, the sassafras laurel, and the Californian olive.
    Botanically it is Umbellularia Californica (Oreodaphne California)*
    The oil has the following characters :—
    Specific gravity
    Optical rotation
    Acid value ......
    Ester ,,
    „ ,, (after acetylation) ....


. 0-935 to 0-950
. - 22° „ - 25
3 „ 5
5 „ 7
50
It is soluble in 1'5 to 2*5 volumes of 70 per cent, alcohol.
Heaney



  • states that the yield of oil from the leaves is 4 per cent..
    He claimed to have found about 35 per cent, of a hydrocarbon and 65
    per cent, of an oxygenated body, which he termed oreodaphnol, in the
    oil. This body, however, has never received confirmation, and it is very
    doubtful whether the hydrocarbon he obtained was pure. He assigned
    to it a specific gravity '894 and boiling-point 175°. Stillman,
    2
    on the
    other hand, claims that it contains terpineol and an oxygenated body of
    the formula C 8 H 12 O, which he named umbellol.
    Modern investigations by Power and Lees, however, have not con-
    firmed this statement. These chemists have isolated from the oil the
    following constituents : (1) Traces of free fatty acids including formic
    acid; (2) 1'7 per cent, of eugenol; (3) 6 per cent, of pinene ; (4) 20 per
    cent, of cineol; (5) 60 per cent, of a new unsaturated cyclic ketone of a.
    *Amer. Jour. Pliarm., 47 (1875), 105.^2 Berichte, 13 (1880), 630.

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