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CITRONELLOL

CAS No.
26489-01-0
Chemical Name:
CITRONELLOL
Synonyms
FEMA 2307;FEMA 2309;CITRONELLOL AJ;CITRONELLOL 96;CITRONELLOL 80;DL-CITRONELLOL;DL-B-CITRONELLOL;CITRONELLOL PRIME;CITRONELLOL EXTRA;CITRONELLOL 90/92
CBNumber:
CB3377987
Molecular Formula:
C10H20O
Molecular Weight:
156.27
MDL Number:
MFCD00002935
MOL File:
26489-01-0.mol
Last updated:2023-05-04 17:34:36

CITRONELLOL Properties

Melting point 77-83 °C(lit.)
Boiling point 225 °C(lit.)
Density 0.857 g/mL at 25 °C(lit.)
vapor density 5.4 (vs air)
vapor pressure ~0.02 mm Hg ( 25 °C)
refractive index n20/D 1.456(lit.)
Flash point 209 °F
storage temp. 2-8°C
CAS DataBase Reference 26489-01-0(CAS DataBase Reference)

SAFETY

Risk and Safety Statements

Symbol(GHS)  GHS hazard pictograms
GHS07
Signal word  Warning
Hazard statements  H315-H317
Precautionary statements  P264-P280-P302+P352-P321-P332+P313-P362-P261-P272-P280-P302+P352-P333+P313-P321-P363-P501
Hazard Codes  Xi
Risk Statements  36/37/38
Safety Statements  26-36
WGK Germany  1
RTECS  RH3400000

CITRONELLOL Chemical Properties,Uses,Production

Chemical Properties

The enantiomers (3R)-(+)-citronellol and (3S)-(?)-citronellol occur in many essential oils.
(?)-Citronellol isolated from natural sources is often named rhodinol. At present, the name rhodinol is also used for the isopropenyl isomer α-citronellol or a mixture of the two isomers.
In many natural products, citronellol occurs as a mixture of its two enantiomers; the pure (+) or (?) formis seldom found. (?)-Citronellol is the predominant enantiomer in geranium and rose oils, both of whichmay contain up to 50% citronellols. Citronellol is a colorless liquid with a sweet rose-like odor. The odor of (?)- citronellol is more delicate than that of (+)-citronellol.
Citronellol undergoes the typical reactions of primary alcohols. Compared with geraniol, which contains one more double bond, citronellol is relatively stable. Citronellol is converted into citronellal by dehydrogenation or oxidation; hydrogenation yields 3,7-dimethyloctan-l-ol. Citronellyl esters are easily prepared by esterification with acid anhydrides.

Preparation

(?)-Citronellol is still obtained mainly from geranium oil by saponification followed by fractional distillation (“rhodinol”). Although of high odor quality, this grade does not possess the true (?)-citronellol odor due to impurities. Much larger quantities of (+)-citronellol and racemic citronellol are used and are prepared by partial or total synthesis.
1) Synthesis from citronellal: Citronellal can be hydrogenated to citronellol by the use of special catalysts and/or special hydrogenation techniques, for example, [122]. The citronellal that is used as the starting material may originate from synthetic production or from isolation of essential oils. Citronellal from citronella oil yields (+)-citronellol; the corresponding material from citronellal from Eucalyptus citriodora oil is racemic. Pure (+)-citronellol is also obtained from (+)-citronellal, which is produced as an intermediate of (?)-menthol. By this asymmetric technology, pure (?)-citronellal and, therefore, pure (?)-citronellol are also available.
2) Synthesis of racemic or slightly dextrorotatory citronellol from geraniol fractions of essential oils: This citronellol is produced by catalytic hydrogenation of saponified geraniol fractions (also containing (+)- citronellol) obtained from Java citronella oil, followed by fractional distillation. Selective hydrogenation of the double bond in the 2-position of geraniol in geraniol–citronellol mixtures isolated from essential oils can be achieved by using Raney cobalt as a catalyst; overhydrogenation to 3,7-dimethyloctan-l-ol can be largely avoided by this method.
3) Synthesis of racemic citronellol from synthetic geraniol, nerol, or citral: A considerable amount of commercial synthetic racemic citronellol is produced by partial hydrogenation of synthetic geraniol and/or nerol. Another starting material is citral, which can be hydrogenated, for example, in the presence of a catalyst system consisting of transition metals and amines.
4) Preparation of (?)-citronellol from optically active pinenes: (+)-cis-Pinane is readily synthesized by hydrogenation of (+)-α-pinene or (+)-β-pinene and is then pyrolyzed to give (+)-3,7-dimethyl-1,6-octadiene. This compound can be converted into (?)-citronellol (97% purity) by reaction with triisobutylaluminumor diisobutylaluminumhydride, followed by air oxidation and hydrolysis of the resulting aluminum alcoholate.

Definition

ChEBI: Citronellol is a monoterpenoid that is oct-6-ene substituted by a hydroxy group at position 1 and methyl groups at positions 3 and 7. It has a role as a plant metabolite.

Contact allergens

L-Citronellol is a constituent of rose and geranium oils. d-Citronellol occurs in Ceylon and Java citronella oils. As a fragrance allergen, citronellol has to be mentioned by name in cosmetics within the EU.

CITRONELLOL Preparation Products And Raw materials

Raw materials

Preparation Products

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7-dimethyl-(+/-)-6-octen-1-o FEMA 2309 FEMA 2307 CITRONELLOL, DL-B- CITRONELLOL AJ CITRONELLOL 96/98 CITRONELLOL 80 CITRONELLOL 96 CITRONELLOL 90/92 CITRONELLOL EXTRA CITRONELLOL PRIME DL-B-CITRONELLOL DL-CITRONELLOL 6-OCTEN-1-OL, 3,7-DIMETHYL 3,7-DIMETHYL-OCT-6-EN-1-OL 2,6-DIMETHYL-2-OCTEN-8-OL CITRONELLOL 95+% FCC (+/-)-3,7-Dimethyloct-6-en-1-ol Citronellol/Geraniol mixture 26489-01-0 Terpenes Acyclic Monoterpenes Building Blocks Acyclic Alkenes Organic Building Blocks