cananga leaf oil

volatile oil obtained from the leaves of the ylang-ylang, cananga odorata, annonaceae

spicy

Identification

Namecananga leaf oil
IUPACcananga odorata hook. f. and thomas. oil
FDA UNIISearch
CoE Number103

Regulatory

Physical Properties

Appearance pale yellow clear liquid (est)
Food Chemicals Codex Listed No
Specific Gravity 0.90600 to 0.92300 @ 25.00 °C.
Pounds per Gallon - (est). 7.539 to 7.680
Refractive Index 1.49500 to 1.50500 @ 20.00 °C.
Optical Rotation -30.00 to -15.00
Flash Point 185.00 °F. TCC ( 85.00 °C. )
Soluble in alcohol
Insoluble in water

Cosmetic Information

CosIngcosmetic data
Cosmetic Usesfragrance

Organoleptic Properties

Odor Strength medium
Substantivity 116 hour(s) at 100.00 %
Odor Description at 100.00 %.

Safety Information

Oral/Parenteral ToxicityNot determined
Dermal ToxicityNot determined
Inhalation ToxicityNot determined

GHS Classification

['GHS Classification in accordance with 29 CFR 1910 (OSHA HCS)', 'GHS Label elements, including precautionary statements']

Safety in Use

Categoryfragrance agents
RIFM Fragrance Material Safety AssessmentSearch
Recommendation for cananga leaf oil usage levels up to3.0000 % in the fragrance concentrate.
Recommendation for cananga leaf oil flavor usage levels up tonot for flavor use.

No supplier data available

Potential Uses

None Found

Natural Occurrence

cananga odorata

Synonyms

cananga leaf oil cananga odorata leaf oil cananga odoratum leaf oil canangium odoratum leaf oil unona odorata leaf oil uvaria odorata leaf oil volatile oil obtained from the leaves of the ylang-ylang, cananga odorata, annonaceae PubMed: The unusual canangafruticosides A-E: five monoterpene glucosides, two monoterpenes and a monoterpene glucoside diester of the aryldihydronaphthalene lignan dicarboxylic acid from leaves of Cananga odorata var. fruticosa. PubMed: Megastigmane glucosides and an unusual monoterpene from the leaves of Cananga odorata var. odorata, and absolute structures of megastigmane glucosides isolated from C. odorata var. odorata and Breynia officinalis. PubMed: Unusual lactones from Cananga odorata (Annonaceae).