Peroxyhemiacetal profragrant and proflavor compounds
11155518 · 2021-10-26
Assignee
Inventors
- Michael J. Calandra (Plainsboro, NJ)
- Ying Wang (Plainsboro, NJ)
- John Impellizzeri (Plainsboro, NJ, US)
Cpc classification
A23G3/36
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C07C409/20
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C11D3/507
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C07C409/20
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A23G3/36
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
Provided herein is a compound of Formula I: ##STR00001##
wherein R represents a terpene hydroperoxyl selected from the group consisting of ##STR00002##
wherein R′ represents a alkyl group selected from the group consisting: CH.sub.3(CH.sub.2).sub.8—, CH.sub.3(CH.sub.2).sub.6—, and CH.sub.3—.
Claims
1. A method to improve, enhance or modify odoriferous properties of a perfuming composition or a perfumed article, which method comprises adding to said composition or article a composition consisting of a compound of Formula I ##STR00008## wherein R represents a terpene hydroperoxyl selected from the group consisting of ##STR00009## wherein R′ represents an alkyl group selected from the group consisting of CH.sub.3(CH.sub.2).sub.8—, CH.sub.3(CH.sub.2).sub.6—, and CH.sub.3—; and wherein the compound of Formula I is in reversible equilibrium with a corresponding aldehyde and hydroperoxide; a non-polar solvent; and optionally an alcohol.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the perfuming composition or the perfumed article is selected from the group consisting of laundry detergents, fabric softeners, and hard surface cleaners.
3. A composition consisting of: a compound of Formula I ##STR00010## wherein R represents a terpene hydroperoxyl selected from the group consisting of ##STR00011## wherein R′ represents an alkyl group selected from the group consisting of CH.sub.3(CH.sub.2).sub.8—, CH.sub.3(CH.sub.2).sub.6—, and CH.sub.3—, and a corresponding aldehyde and hydroperoxide; and wherein the compound of Formula I is in reversible equilibrium with the corresponding aldehyde and hydroperoxide; a non-polar solvent; and optionally an alcohol.
4. A method of delivering a compound selected from the group consisting of decanal, octanal and acetaldehyde comprising adding to an aqueous solution the composition of claim 3.
5. A composition comprising the composition of claim 3 and an aqueous solution.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) Provided herein are the peroxyhemiacetal compounds listed below. The compounds can be made according to the procedure set forth as set below under preparation and methods.
(6) ##STR00005## ##STR00006## ##STR00007##
(7) Compounds provided herein may be used for example, but not limited to laundry detergents, fabric softeners, and hard surface cleaners. In another embodiment provided herein are compounds for use in flavors for example but not limited to beverages, powdered beverages and confectionery to provide for example freshness and/or juiciness.
(8) Preparation and Methods
(9) The compounds claimed herein can be made using the following procedure:
(10) Preparation of Aldehyde Stock Solutions
(11) Approximately 400 mg of neat aldehyde (either octanal, decanal, or acetaldehyde separately) was weighed into a 5 mL volumetric flask, and diluted to volume with purified limonene, heptane, or other non-polar solvent to make an approximately 80 mg/mL stock solution.
(12) Preparation of Terpene Hydroperoxide Stock Solutions
(13) Approximately 5 mg of each terpene hydroperoxide (Lim-1-HP, Lim-2-HP, Lin-6-HP, or Lin-7-HP) was weighed out into separate vials, and 1.0 mL of isopropanol or ethanol was added to each, to make a series of 5 mg/mL stock solutions.
(14) Preparation of the Peroxyhemiacetals
(15) The reaction was set-up with a large molar excess of aldehyde present. For each possible combination of one aldehyde (octanal, decanal, or acetaldehyde) with one terpene hydroperoxide (Lim-1-HP, Lim-2-HP, Lin-6-HP, or Lin-7-HP), the procedure below was done to prepare in situ all of the possible peroxyhemiacetals that could arise from these starting compounds.
(16) Into a 1 mL glass vial with cap was placed 0.3 mL of aldehyde stock solution and 0.1 mL of terpene hydroperoxide stock solution. The mixture was vortexed briefly, and the capped vial was allowed to stand at room temperature overnight.
(17) Attempts at further isolation and purification cannot be performed because the formation reaction is a reversible equilibrium, so the compounds are used “as is” in a solvent appropriate for the specific usage. For example in a flavor use, limonene and ethanol would be used to prepare the respective aldehyde and hydroperoxide stock solutions.
(18) HPLC Analysis of terpene hydroperoxides and peroxyhemiacetals was performed as described in the published method of Calandra et al, Flavour and Fragrance Journal, 2015, 30, 121-130.
(19) Headspace GC/MS Analysis:
(20) The appearance of octanal by dissociation of a peroxyhemiacetal was monitored as follows.
(21) Gc-Ms Conditions:
(22) Instrument: Agilent-GC-7890A, MS-7000B. GC column: StabilWax®, containing a polyethylene glycol phase, with an inner diameter of 0.25 mm, a length of 30 m and a film thickness of 0.25 μm. The injector temperature: 250° C. 1 μl sample is injected at constant flow (1.2 mL/min, carrier gas: helium). MS: scan m/e 29-350 The temperature program: 40° C. (2 min) to 120° C. @ 20° C./min to 240° C. (3 min) @ 30° C./min. in a 10:1 split mode
SPME: SPME fiber: 100 um PDMS, 23 GA, dissociated at 250° C. for 2 minutes. Between uses, the fiber was cleaned by baking for 5 min at 250° C. Samples were placed in a 20 mL SPME vial and kept in a 25° C. thermostated block. After placement in the block, we waited for 20 minutes to allow for equilibration prior to the initial sampling. Subsequent samplings took place after another 0.33, 0.66, 1, 1.5, 2.5, 4, 24, 30, and 48 hours. Fiber collection time: 0.5 min.
(23) The following Examples are illustrative only and are not meant to limit the scope of the claims, the Summary, or any invention presented herein.
EXAMPLES
Example 1
(24) Solutions of limonene hydroperoxide isomers (lim-HP-B & lim-HP-A) were separately reacted as described in Appendix 1 with decanal (C10) and octanal (C8) respectively. Note: Lim-HP-B is the 1-position isomer, and Lim-HP-A is the 2-position isomer. These products were analyzed by HPLC as described in Appendix 2. The peaks of lim-HP-B, lim-HP-A and the four peroxyhemiacetal adducts (lim-HP-B+C10, lim-HP-B+C8, lim-HP-A+C10 and lim-HP-A+C8) were monitored throughout a 24 hour period while allowed to stand on the benchtop diluted in the water/isopropanol sample preparation solvent. The peak areas of lim-HP-B and lim-HP-A increased, while the peaks of lim-HP-B+C10, lim-HP-B+C8, lim-HP-A+C10 and lim-HP-A+C8 decreased because they dissociated back to the corresponding lim-HP-B & lim-HP-A, releasing decanal or octanal respectively in the process. Results are presented in
Example 2
(25) The peroxyhemiacetal derived from octanal and mixed isomers of limonene hydroperoxide was prepared as follows: 1.0 mL of a 117.9 mg/mL solution of limonene hydroperoxide mixed isomers in limonene solvent was placed in a 10 mL glass vial. Approximately one molar equivalent of octanal (89.7 mg) was added, and the vial was sealed then vortexed for 10 seconds. The vial was stored overnight on the benchtop (room temperature) to allow formation of the peroxyhemiacetal, then stored at −20° C. for future use.
(26) 20 microliters of the product solution prepared above was diluted with 2.0 mL of 60/40 v/v isopropyl alcohol/water. One mL of this solution was immediately transferred to a 20 mL headspace analysis vial, capped, and kept in a 25° C. thermostated block. The release of octanal from this peroxyhemiacetal was periodically monitored over 48 hours by headspace gas chromatography-mass spectrometry as described in the specification under preparation and methods. The results are shown in