Citral
Citral[ 1]
Geranial
Neral
Names
IUPAC name
3,7-dimethylocta-2,6-dienal
Other names
citral geranialdehyde
Identifiers
ChEBI
ChEMBL
ChemSpider
ECHA InfoCard
100.023.994
EC Number
KEGG
RTECS number
UNII
UN number
2810
InChI=1S/C10H16O/c1-9(2)5-4-6-10(3)7-8-11/h5,7-8H,4,6H2,1-3H3/b10-7+
Y Key: WTEVQBCEXWBHNA-JXMROGBWSA-N
Y InChI=1/C10H16O/c1-9(2)5-4-6-10(3)7-8-11/h5,7-8H,4,6H2,1-3H3/b10-7+
Key: WTEVQBCEXWBHNA-JXMROGBWBB
O=CC=C(C)CCC=C(C)C
O=C/C=C(/CC/C=C(/C)C)C
Properties
C10 H16 O
Molar mass
152.24 g/mol
Appearance
Pale yellow liquid
Odor
Lemon like
Density
0.893 g/cm3
Boiling point
229 °C (444 °F; 502 K)
Vapor pressure
0.22 mmHg (20 °C)
−98.9× 10−6 cm3 /mol
Hazards
GHS labelling :
Warning
H315 , H317
P261 , P264 , P272 , P280 , P302+P352 , P321 , P332+P313 , P333+P313 , P362 , P363 , P501
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Flash point
91 °C (196 °F; 364 K)
Related compounds
Related alkenals
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their
standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Chemical compound
Citral is an acyclic monoterpene aldehyde. Being a monoterpene , it is made of two isoprene units . Citral is a collective term which covers two geometric isomers that have their own separate names; the E -isomer is named geranial (trans -citral; α-citral[ 2] ) or citral A. The Z -isomer is named neral (cis -citral; β-citral[ 2] ) or citral B. These stereoisomers occur as a mixture, often not in equal proportions; e.g. in essential oil of Australian ginger , the neral to geranial ratio is 0.61.[ 3]
Occurrence
Citral is present in the volatile oils of several plants, including lemon myrtle (90–98%), Litsea citrata (90%), Litsea cubeba (70–85%), lemongrass (65–85%), lemon tea-tree (70–80%), Ocimum gratissimum (66.5%), Lindera citriodora (about 65%), Calypranthes parriculata (about 62%), petitgrain (36%), lemon verbena (30–35%), lemon ironbark (26%), lemon balm (11%), lime (6–9%), lemon (2–5%), and orange .[ 4] [ 5] [ 6] Further, in the lipid fraction (essential oil) of Australian ginger (51–71%)[ 3] Of the many sources of citral, the Australian myrtaceous tree, lemon myrtle, Backhousia citriodora F. Muell. (of the family Myrtaceae ), is considered superior.[ 7]
Uses
Citral is a precursor in the industrial production of vitamin A , vitamin E , vitamin K .
Citral is also precursor to lycopene , ionone and methylionone .
Fragrances
Citral has a strong lemon (citrus) scent and is used as an aroma compound in perfumery. It is used to fortify lemon oil. (Nerol, another perfumery compound, has a less intense but sweeter lemon note.) The aldehydes citronellal and citral are considered key components responsible for the lemon note with citral preferred.[ 7]
It also has pheromonal effects in acari and insects .[ 8] [ 9]
The herb Cymbopogon citratus has shown promising insecticidal and antifungal activity against storage pests.[ 10]
Food additive
Citral is commonly used as a food additive ingredient.[ 11]
It has been tested (2016) in vitro against the food-borne pathogen Cronobacter sakazakii .[ 12]
See also
References
^ Citral , The Merck Index , 12th Edition.
^ a b Waghulde, S.; Parmar, P.; Mule, J.; Pashte, D.; Patil, B.; Modhale, N.; Gorde, N.; Kharche, A.; Kale, M. (2020). "Lead Finding from Plant Cymbopogon Citratus with Immunomodulator Potentials through in Silico Methods" . Chemistry Proceedings . 3 (1): 77. doi :10.3390/ecsoc-24-08302 . ISSN 2673-4583 .
^ a b Zachariah, T. J.; Parthasarathy, V. A.; Chempakam, B. (2008). Chemistry of spices . Wallingford: CABI. p. 76. ISBN 9781845934057 . OCLC 1120264204 .
^ Fenaroli, G.; Furia, T.E.; Bellanca, N. Handbook of Flavor Ingredients . ISBN 0-87819-532-7 .
^ Lawless, J. (2 November 1995). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Essential Oils . Element. ISBN 1-85230-661-0 .
^ "The Aromatic Plant Project" . Archived from the original on 24 November 2019. Retrieved 1 June 2008 .
^ a b Southwell, Ian (9 July 2021). "Backhousia citriodora F. Muell. (Lemon Myrtle), an Unrivalled Source of Citral" . Foods . 10 (7): 1596. doi :10.3390/foods10071596 . PMC 8305781 . PMID 34359465 .
^ Kuwahara, Yasumasa; Suzuki, Hiroshi; Matsumoto, Katsuhiko; Wada, Yoshitake (1983). "Pheromone Study on Acarid Mites. XI. Function of Mite Body as Geometrical Isomerization and Reduction of Citral (the Alarm Pheromone)" . Applied Entomology and Zoology . 18 (1): 30–39. doi :10.1303/aez.18.30 .
^ Robacker, D.C.; Hendry, L.B. (1977). "Neral and geranial: components of the sex pheromone of the parasitic wasp, Itoplectis conquisitor". Journal of Chemical Ecology . 3 (5): 563–577. doi :10.1007/BF00989077 . S2CID 11568355 .
^ Dubey, N. K.; Takeya, Koichi; Itokawa, Hideji (1997). "Citral: A cytotoxic principle isolated from the essential oil of Cymbopogon citratus against P388 leukaemia cells". Current Science . 73 (1): 22–24. JSTOR 24098141 .
^ Liao, Pei-Chun; Yang, Tsung-Shi; Chou, Ju-Ching; Chen, Jie; Lee, Shu-Ching; Kuo, Yueh-Hsiung; Ho, Chen-Lung; Chao, Louis Kuo-Ping (1 December 2015). "Anti-inflammatory activity of neral and geranial isolated from fruits of Litsea cubeba Lour" . Journal of Functional Foods . 19 : 248–258. doi :10.1016/j.jff.2015.09.034 .
^ Shi, Chao; Song, Kaikuo; Zhang, Xiaorong; Sun, Yi; Sui, Yue; Chen, Yifei; Jia, Zhenyu; Sun, Huihui; Sun, Zheng; Xia, Xiaodong (14 July 2016). "Antimicrobial Activity and Possible Mechanism of Action of Citral against Cronobacter sakazakii " . PLOS ONE . 11 (7): e0159006. Bibcode :2016PLoSO..1159006S . doi :10.1371/journal.pone.0159006 . PMC 4945043 . PMID 27415761 .
External links