Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Turpentine oils

C, b.p. 156 C. The most important of the terpene hydrocarbons. It is found in most essential oils derived from the Coniferae, and is the main constituent of turpentine oil. Contains two asymmetric carbon atoms. The (- -)-form is easily obtained in a pure state by fractionation of Greek turpentine oil, of which it constitutes 95%. Pinene may be separated from turpentine oil in the form of its crystalline nitrosochloride, CioHigClNO, from which the ( + )-form may be recovered by boiling with aniline in alcoholic solution. When heated under pressure at 250-270 C, a-pinene is converted into dipentene. It can be reduced by hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst to form... [Pg.314]

By oxidation with permanganate it forms pinonic acid, C,oH,<503, a monobasic acid derived from cyclobutane. With strong sulphuric acid it forms a mixture of limonene, dipentene, terpinolene, terpinene, camphene and p-cymene. Hydrogen chloride reacts with turpentine oil to give CioHijCl, bomyl chloride, artificial camphor . [Pg.315]

Oil-free alkyds Oil from seeds Oil-in-water emulsion Oil laundering Oil length Oil mining Oil of anise Oil of bergamot Oil of eucalyptus Oil oflemon Oil of Olay Oil of Palma Christi Oil of turpentine Oil Orange Oil-pump Oil reclaiming Oil recovery... [Pg.699]

Turpentine Oil. The world s largest-volume essential oil, turpentine [8006-64-2] is produced ia many parts of the world. Various species of piaes and balsamiferous woods are used, and several different methods are appHed to obtain the oils. Types of turpentines include dry-distiUed wood turpentine from dry distillation of the chopped woods and roots of pines steam-distilled wood turpentine which is steam-distilled from pine wood or from solvent extracts of the wood and sulfate turpentine, which is a by-product of the production of sulfate ceUulose. From a perfumery standpoint, steam-distilled wood turpentine is the only important turpentine oil. It is rectified to yield pine oil, yellow or white as well as wood spirits of turpentine. Steam-distilled turpentine oil is a water-white mobile Hquid with a refreshing warm-balsamic odor. American turpentine oil contains 25—35% P-pinene (22) and about 50% a-pinene (44). European and East Indian turpentines are rich in a-pinene (44) withHtfle P-pinene (22), and thus are exceUent raw materials... [Pg.339]

I.4. Polyterpene resins. Terpene resins are obtained from natural terpene monomers obtained from naval stores, paper pulp production, and citrus juice production. Terpenes are found in almost all living plants, and the turpentine oil from pine trees is the most important source. [Pg.610]

Gum turpentine is obtained from wounding living trees to get an exudate containing turpentine and rosin. Turpentine is separated from the rosin by continuous steam distillation and further fractionation. Wood turpentine comes from the extraction of stumps of pine trees using naphtha, and subsequent separation of rosin and turpentine by fractional distillation. Tail-oil turpentine is a byproduct of the Kraft sulphate paper manufacture. Terpenes are isolated from the sulphate terpentine and separated from the black digestion liquor. The composition of turpentine oils depends on its source, although a-pinene and p-pinene are the major components. [Pg.610]

Au tvlao tarpentiae oil is derived principally troro Pinus laricio. Us composition has not been exhaustively studied, but it consists of terpeoce and is similar io composition to I ronch turpentine oil. Its characters aril as follows... [Pg.30]

Turpentine oil lowers specitic gravity and solubility, further, the rotation is affected, the lacvo-rotatory French turpentine oil fo - 20 to - 40°) raising, aud tbe desIro-toLatorj American oil (ud up to + 15 l... [Pg.198]

By oxidation of d- and Z-pinene of high rotatory power, Barbier and Grignard obtained the optically active forms of pinonic acid. Z-pinene from French turpentine oil (boiling-point 155 to 157 , od - 37 2 157 to 160 , tto - 32 3°) was oxidised with permanganate. From the product of oxidation, which (after elimination of the volatile acids and of nopinic acid) boiled at 189 to 195 under 18 mm. pressure, Z-pinonic acid separated out in long crystalline needles, which, after recrystallisation from a mixture of ether and petroleum ether, melted at 67° to 69 . The acid was easily soluble in water and ether, fairly soluble in chloroform, and almost insoluble in petroleum ether. Its specific rotation is [a]o - 90-5 in chloroform solution. Oximation produced two oximes one, laevo-rotatory, melting-point 128 and the other, dextro-rotatory, melting-point 189° to 191°. [Pg.44]

Varon considers that a-pinene and /8-pinene exist in the following approximate proportions in French, American, and German turpentine oils —... [Pg.47]

This terpene has been isolated by Simonsen from Indian turpentine oil, from Pinus longifolia. It is identical with the terpene previously described by Robinson as a terpene yielding sylvestrene hydrochloride when treated with hydrogen chloride. Its characters are as follows —... [Pg.75]

Verbenone results from the auto-oxidation of turpentine oil, d-... [Pg.226]

When the terpene a-fenchene (isopinene) is hydrated by means of acetic and sulphuric acids, it yields an isomer of fenchyl alcohol, which is known as isofenchyl alcohol (q.v.), and which on oxidation yields iso-fenchone, as fenchyl alcohol yields fenchone. The two ketones, fenchone and isofenchone, are sharply differentiated by isofenchone yielding iso-fenchocamphoric acid, Cj Hj O, on oxidation with potassium permanganate, which is not the case with fenchone. According to Aschan,i the hydrocarbon found in turpentine oil, and known as /9-pinolene (or cyclo-fenchene—as he now proposes to name it), when hydrated in the usual manner, yields both fenchyl and isofenchyl alcohols, which on oxidation yield the ketones fenchone and isofenchone. According to Aschan the relationships of these bodies are expressed by the following formulae —... [Pg.234]

Turpentine Oil.—This is readily recognised in oils which contain no pinene, as this is the main constituent of turpentine oil. It is usually found in the first distillates, and generally reduces the specific gravity and effects the solubility and optical rotation. Its presence is proved by the formation of pinene hydrochloride (melting-point 125°) and the nitro-sochloride (melting-point 103°). If pinene is a constituent of the oil itself, the addition of turpentine can only be proved by comparison with an authentic sample. [Pg.356]

Terpentin-ersatz, m. turpentine substitute, white spirit, -fimis, m. turpentine varnish, -geist, m. spirits of turpentine (oil of turpentine). [Pg.443]

Terpentin-harz, n. turpentine resin. -81, n. (oil of) turpentine rosin oil. -fllersatz, m. turpentine substitute, -Olfimis, m. turpentine varnish, -olseife, /. turpentine-oil soap, -pech, n. turpentine pitch, -salbe, /. turpentine ointment, -spiritus, m. = Terpen-tingeist. [Pg.443]

Succinic acid Turpentine oil Mycophenolic acid Pencillium brevi, compactum... [Pg.434]

Ether, Alcohol, Paper, Turpentine oil plus Sulfuric acid. Ignition on contact with K permanganate... [Pg.656]

The three main platform molecules employed in terpene chemistry are a-pinene and / -pinene, which are extracted from turpentine oil (350000 t a-1) a co-product of paper pulp industry, and limonene extracted from citrus oil (30000 t a-1). [Pg.59]


See other pages where Turpentine oils is mentioned: [Pg.226]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.1032]    [Pg.308]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.351]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.217]    [Pg.434]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.351]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.905]    [Pg.978]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.230]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.297]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.307]    [Pg.319]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.238 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.68 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.9 ]




SEARCH



Balsam turpentine oil

Gum turpentine, oil

Oil of turpentine

Sulfate turpentine oil

Turpentine

Wood turpentine oils

© 2024 chempedia.info