| Limonene | |
|---|---|
| Chemical name | 1-methyl-4-prop-1-en-2-yl-cyclohexene |
| Synonyms | 4-isopropenyl-1-methyl-cyclohexene Racemic: DL-limonene; dipentene |
| Chemical formula | C10H16 |
| Molecular mass | 136.24 g/mol |
| Melting point | -95 °C |
| Boiling point | 176 °C |
| Density | 0.8411 g/cm3 |
| Refractive index | 1.4730 |
| Flash point | 50°C |
| CAS number | 138-86-3 |
| EINECS number | 205-341-0 |
| SMILES | CC1=CCC(C(=C)(C))CC1 |
| Chemical infobox | |
As the main odor constituent of citrus (plant family Rutaceae), d-limonene is used in food manufacturing as a flavoring, and added to cleaning products such as hand cleansers to give a lemon-orange fragrance. See: orange oil.
Limonene is increasingly being used as an environmentally friendly alternative to mineral oils as a solvent for cleaning purposes, such as the removal of oil from machine parts, being more easily biodegradable than mineral oils, and produced from a renewable source (citrus oil, as a byproduct of orange juice manufacture.)
The (R)-enantiomer is also used as botanical insecticide.
The (S)-enantiomer, also known as l-limonene (CAS number 5989-54-8, EINECS number 227-815-6), is used as a fragrance in some cleaning products. In contrast to the citrus (orange-lemon) scent (see above) of d-limonene, the enantiomer l-limonene has a piney, turpentine-like odor.
Limonene is a relatively stable terpene, which can be distilled without decomposition, though it forms isoprene when passed over a hot metal filament. It is easily oxidised in moist air to carveol and carvone* . Oxidation using sulfur leads to p-cymene and a sulfide.
Limonene occurs naturally as the (R)-enantiomer, but it can be racemised to dipentene simply by heating at 300 °C. When warmed with mineral acid, limonene forms the conjugated diene terpinene, which can itself easily be oxidised to p-cymene, an aromatic hydrocarbon. Evidence for this includes the formation of Diels-Alder α-terpinene adducts when limonene is heated with maleic anhydride.
It is possible to effect reaction at one of the double bonds selectively. Anhydrous hydrogen chloride reacts preferentially at the disubstituted alkene, whereas epoxidation with MCPBA occurs at the trisubstituted alkene. In both cases the second C=C double bond can be made to react if desired.
Limonene is formed from geranyl pyrophosphate, via cyclisation of a neryl carbocation or its equivalent as shown. The final step involves loss of a proton from the cation to form the alkene.
Limonene and its oxidation products are skin irritants, and limonene-1,2-oxide (formed by aerial oxidation) is a known skin sensitizer. Most reported cases of irritation have involved long-term industrial exposure to the pure compound, e.g. during degreasing or the preparation of paints. However a study of patients presenting dermatitis showed that 3% were sensitized to limonene.
Limonene causes renal cancer in male rats, but not in female rats or in mice of either sex, due to binding of the metabolite limonene-1,2-oxide to α2u-globulin, a protein produced only by male rats. There is no evidence for carcinogenicity or genotoxicity in humans. The IARC classifies d-limonene under Class 3: not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans. *
Limonene is listed in annex 1 of the directive 67/548/EEC under index number 601-029-00-7 *. The pure substance is classified as irritant (Xi) and dangerous for the environment (N). The following risk and safety statements are obligatory:
Limonene is classified * under the categories
Limonene is listed in Class 3, flammable liquids, Packing Group III, under the Australian Dangerous Goods Code.
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"Limonene".
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