perfumes

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Perfumes • Earliest use of plant fragrance lost in history • Perfume (burning plants) may have been first use • Egyptians using scented oils at least 5000 years ago • Egyptian men would put solid cone of perfume on the head, let it melt

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Perfumes. Earliest use of plant fragrance lost in history Perfume (burning plants) may have been first use Egyptians using scented oils at least 5000 years ago Egyptian men would put solid cone of perfume on the head, let it melt. Greeks used various scents for different body parts - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Perfumes

Perfumes• Earliest use of plant fragrance lost in history

• Perfume (burning plants) may have been first use

• Egyptians using scented oils at least 5000 years ago

• Egyptian men would put solid cone of perfume on the head, let it melt

Page 2: Perfumes

• Greeks used various scents for different body parts– mint, marjorum,

thyme, etc

• Romans scented clothes, houses, bedding and bath oil, as well as their bodies

• Japanese and Chinese used incense as clocks

http://www.nawcc.org/museum/nwcm/galleries/asian/incense.htm

Page 3: Perfumes

Traditional methods of extracting essences

• Not usually water soluble

• Macerate (chop) plant parts in hot oil, then extract with alcohol

• Enfleurage – flowers placed on layer of

purified fat or oil– they are replaced every

couple of weeks– yields outstanding scents,

very expensivehttp://www.museesdegrasse.com

Page 4: Perfumes

• Popularity of perfume waned in Europe after the fall of the Roman empire, returned with the crusaders

• Distillation of essential oils

• Attributed to Avicenna, Arab, late 900’s

Page 5: Perfumes

Distillation of natural fragrances

• Plant parts are exposed to steam• Volatile oils are carried out in steam• Steam is cooled, oil floats and can be

skimmed• 5-6 tons of roses needed to get one kilo of

essential rose oil• Fractional distillation allows collection of

substances with different volatility

Page 6: Perfumes

Attars (steam distillates) being prepared in India

Page 7: Perfumes

Perfumes in 18th century Europe

• More flowery as opposed to heavier scents

• Numerous ways to use perfumes, elaborate containers

• Vinaigrettes• Pommanders go out of

style with availability of liquid perfume

Page 8: Perfumes

Eau de Cologne

• Germany, invented an 1709 by an Italian barber

• Rosemary, orange flower, and bergamot oils distilled in grape spirits

• Non-greasy• Napolean decreed the

formula must be public in 1810

Page 9: Perfumes

Grasse, in Provence, France

• Started with tannery perfumes– for scenting gloves?

• A local company got a patent on the distillation system

• 1720’s become a local industry

• Good sources for jasmine, rose, orange

• Modern perfume industry started here

Page 10: Perfumes

Perfume odorant types today

• Concretes– purest, soft plant parts are placed in solvent

• Absolutes– concretes concentrated in alcohol

• Resinoids– extracted like concretes, from plant secretions

• Tinctures– direct extraction with ethanol

• Distilled essential oils– most common modern methods

Page 11: Perfumes

Perfume anatomy

• Top notes– immediately perceived, highly volatile, bright,

often citrus, ginger

• Middle notes– a minute to an hour; often rose, lavender

• Bottom notes– often animal, resin scents, perhaps vanilla,

sandlewood

Page 12: Perfumes

Types of fragances

• Perfume (22% essential oils)

• Eau de Parfum (15-22%)

• Eau de Toilette (8-15%)

• Eau de Cologne (4%)

Page 13: Perfumes

Business of scents (perfumes)

• 10-20 billion dollar industry

• Only a few companies are doing smell R & D

• They work for two main client groups; household products companies, and perfume companies

• Lots of secrecy

Page 14: Perfumes

Lavender

• Mint family• Sterile hybrid of two species

(L. angustifolia and L. latifolia) most often used today

• Obtained by steam distillation• More than 300 components,

linalool important• In many men’s fragrances (fern

note)

Page 15: Perfumes

Rose• Rosa centifolia and

damascena

• Petals extracted with steam or solvents

• Used in many perfumes, foods

Page 16: Perfumes

Geranium • Pelargonium graveolens• Oils distilled from leaves and

stems• Much cheaper than rose,

similar fragrance in some types

• Essence from Reunion island especially fruity

• Also in drinks, insect repellent

Page 17: Perfumes

Geraniol and related compounds

• Found in a variety of plants

• Also produced synthetically

Page 18: Perfumes

Jasmine• Jasminum grandiflorum• Volatile solvents now

used, used to be enfleurage• A ton of flowers to yield a

kilo of essence• Extremely expensive• Wide range of

“jasmonoid” compounds, biosynthesis perhaps similar to prostaglandins

• Benzyl acetate and related compounds common

Page 19: Perfumes

Tuberose

• Polyanthes tuberosa• Amaryllis relative• Expensive, low yield to

extract, done by enfleurage until relatively recently

• Many fragrance compounds (eugenols, nerol) also some weird tuberose lactones

Page 20: Perfumes

Orange

• Citrus species

• Flowers, leaves, fruits, even bark all used

• Distillation or solvents used

• Wide range of compounds isolated, including linalool

Page 21: Perfumes

Bergamot

• Citrus bergamia• Zests from unripe fruits

used• Harmonious with many

other compounds; contains linalool, limonene does not dominate in this as it does in orange oil

• Coumarins removed from essence (photosensitizing)

• In Earl Grey tea, as well as perfumes, soaps

• Eau de Colognes

Page 22: Perfumes

Iris of Florence

• Iris pallida• Violet-scented rhizomes

(orris root) used to produce a concrete with iron in myristic acid (called a butter)

• In perfume with heavy, woody notes

Page 23: Perfumes

ylang-ylang

• Cananga odorata, related plants

• From SE Asia (?)• Annonaceae• Very floral scent• Several common

compounds (eugenols, linalool) also

• p-Cresyl methyl ether – stinks by itself, but blends

well

Page 24: Perfumes

Patchouli

• Shrub in the mint family• Pogostemon cablin • Distilled dried leaves

yield several important fragrances

• Distinctive strong odor, but also mixes well

Page 25: Perfumes

Vanilla• Native to Mexico, much

now grown in Madagascar• More than 200 compounds

have been identified• Extract used in small

amounts in perfumes; it’s very strong

• Lots of synthetic vanillin relatives used

vanillin

Vanillin analogs, some with carnation, cocoa butter overtones

Page 26: Perfumes

Oakmoss

• Evernia prunastri

• A lichen found in much of Europe

• Some constituents now synthesized

Page 27: Perfumes

Olibanum (incense tree)

• Resin from a Boswellia tree

• Resinous, woody smell

• Used in some perfumes (Opium, Jicky)

Page 28: Perfumes

Fixatives

• Various animal products– Ambergis, musk, castoreum, civet– synthetics often used now– e.g. ambergris compound from

sage

Page 29: Perfumes

Others

• Ginger, cardamom, pepper (Piper nigrum), clove

• Many more…

Page 30: Perfumes

Perfume themes

• Floral

• Chypre (bergamot, jasmine, oakmoss)

• Aldehydic (most famous is Chanel No.5, described as piquant)

• Fougerè (lavender, coumarin, oakmoss), often in men’s products

• Woody (sandlewood, patchouli, cedar)

• Oriental (includes vanilla, ambergris)

Page 31: Perfumes

Synthetic vs natural: what are the issues?

• “The truth about fragrance oils”– www.earthmamaangelbaby.com/fragrance_oils.html

– “Each essential oil comes from just one source, a living plant.  There are no chemicals involved.”

• Remember, they are all chemicals!• We may actually know more about the synthetic

mixtures than the natural ones

Page 32: Perfumes

Concerns

• Toxicity to people?

• Allergens?

• Increasing asthma incidence?

• Unknown compounds in the mix?

• Persistence in the environment?– Example: synthetic musk

Page 33: Perfumes

Synthetic musk

• May accumulate in some organisms (e.g. mussels), prevents removal of other toxins