Chemistry of Essential Oils

(Tuis.) #1

344 THE CHEMISTEY OF ESSENTIAL OILS


PHELLANDKBNB OILS IN WHICH THE SESQUITEBPENE IS A PRO-
NOUNCED CONSTITUENT.

| No.

93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114

J.acmenoides
angophoroides.
capitellata
crebra
Dawsoni.
fastigata.
Fletcheril
gomphocephala.
cBmastoma
m€tcrorrhyncha
melanophloia.
microtheca
nigra
ovalifolia.
Planchoniana.
pilularis.
robusta
siderophloia
sideroxylon v.pallens
stellulata.
viminalis.
virgata

Refractive
Index
ndl6° C.

1-5056
1-4881
1.4828
1-4844
1-5144
1-4873
1-4881
1-4815
1-5013
1-4802
1-4950
1-4895
1-4871
1-4921
1-4878
1-4961
1-4801
1-5000
1-4884
1-4902
1-4855
1-5015

Specific
Gravity
H°C.

•9266
•9207
•9176
•8989
•9528
-8948
•8882
•8752
-9196
•9166
•8959
-8866
-8838
•8911
•9166
•8924
•8899
•9081
•9167
•8766
•9088
•9352

Specific
Refractive
Energy
nd— I
d.

•5466
•5301
•5261
•5388
•5399
•5446
•5495
•5501
•5451
•5239
•5526
'•5521
•5511
•5522
•5322
-5559
-5395
•5506
•5328
•5589
•5342
•5363

No. 102 is the only
oil more soluble
than with 1 vol-
ume 80 per cent,
alcohol; a large
number were in-
soluble in 10 vol-
umes 80 per cent,
alcohol.

OILS NOT CLASSIFIED; CONTAINING GERANIOL AND ITS ACETIC ACID
ESTER, CITRAL, CITRONELLAL, ETC.
115

116

117

118

E. citriodora.
Do. Mr. Ingham, Qld.
E. Macarthuri
Do. cont. 64-73% ester
Do. cont. 68


  • 8 % ester
    E. Staigeriana


„ aggregata.

1-4651
1-4678
1-4793
1-4763
1'4768
1-4871

1-5062

•8887
•8829
•9271
•9252
•9287
•8708

•9701

•5233
•5298
•5172
•5148
•5134
•5594

•5128

Soluble in 1'5 vote.
70°/ 0 alco. atl6°C.
Soluble in 1-3 vol-
umes 70% alcohol.
Insoluble in 6 vol-
umes 80°/0 alcohol.
Insoluble in 10 vols.
80% alcohol.

H. G. Smith^2 has also isolated a sesquiterpene, which is present in
many eucalyptus oils in the portions boiling at above 255°, and which,
in the oil of Eucalyptus hamastoma, represents as much as 50 per cent,
of that fraction. It does not yield crystallised derivatives, but, on the
other hand, when dissolved in glacial acetic acid, it gives characteristic
colour-reactions with acids and also with bromine. When submitted
to the action of bromine vapour the oil acquires first a crimson-red
colour, then violet, and finally indigo-blue. The sesquiterpene, prepared
as pure as possible by fractional distillation, boils at atmospheric pres-
sure at 260° to 265°, and has at 19° the specific gravity O9249. Smith
proposes for the sesquiterpene the name " aromadendrene ".
This sesquiterpene, according to Schorger,^3 may also be present in
the turpentine oil from Pinus Lambertiana.

(^1) Denotes the presence of a small amount of aromadendral in the oil.
(^2) Jour, ofProc. Roy. Soc.,N.S.W.
3 t^35 (1901), 124.
U.S. Dept. Agric. Forest Service, Bull. 119.

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