Quality
control of essential oil in Nepal
Essential oils are complex mixtures, constituted by terpenoid
hydrocarbons, oxygenated terpenes and sesquiterpenes. They originate from the
plant secondary metabolism and are responsible for their characteristic aroma.
The various applications of essential oils account for the great interest in
their study. Such applications may be found in the cosmetic industry, as
ingredients of fragrances, decorative cosmetic, fine fragrances and flavouring,
in the food industry, as aromas and flavours, in the pharmaceutical industry
etc.
Essential oils are natural products that plants produce for their
own needs other than nutrition (i.e. protection or attraction). In general,
they are complex mixtures of organic compounds that give characteristic odour
and flavour to the plants. They are mainly made up by monoterpenes and
sesquiterpenes whose main metabolic pathway is through mevalonate leading to
sesquiterpenes and from methyl-erythritol leading to monoterpenes. They are
located in different parts of the plant. They can be found in the root such as
that of the vetiver grass (Vetiveria zizanioides), in stems like that of peteribi wood
(Cordia
trichotoma)
and incense, in leaves like in eucalyptus trees (Eucalyptus
citriodora),
citronella (Cymbopogon
nardus),
chinchilla (Tagetes
minuta)
and lemon grass (Cymbopogon citratus), in flowers like lavenders (Lavandula
officinalis),
in fruit like lemon, orange (Citrus spp.) and even in seeds
as in the case of anise (Pimpinella Anisum), coriander (Coriandrum
sativum)
and pepper (Piper
nigrum),
among others (Baser, 2010). They can work as internal messengers, like defense substances
or plant volatiles aimed at natural enemies but also to attract pollinating
insects to their host.
Quality Control of Oil There are so
many techniques use for quality control of essential oil. The main steps
involved in control of essential oil contain size reduction, sieving, column
chromatography, spray drying, standardization and crystallization. It seems to
be reacting by heat, by the presence of air (oxygen) or moisture, catalyzed by
exposure to light or by metals. For removal of these drawback. Each essential
oil firstly remove metallic impurities, dry from moisture and clarified and
then it can be stored in well-filled, tightly closed containers, at low
temperature and protected from light. The oil can be dehydrated quite readily
by the addition of anhydrous sodium sulphate, by thoroughly shaking, standing
for overnight or 6-8 hours and filtration. Each oil of a compound or group of
compounds has unique medicinal or specific property. They are also used as
fragrance and flavoring compound in food, pan masala or synthetic juices. So it
is necessary requirement to control the quality of product. The percentage of
these constituents in the oil plays an important part in determining its
quality. The quality and price of some oils are based on the percentage content
of a single chemical component, so separation and measurement of individual
components is very important. Analytical analysis has been widely done by gas
chromatography (GC) and mass spectroscopy (MS). The apparatus by which the
fractions and their percentage are determined is Gas Liquid Chromatographic
unit (GLC). It is most widely used techniques. The analysis requires 1–5 g of
plant essential oil in 80-90 minutes, including distillation.
For food or medicinal extracts TLC
(Thin Layer Chromatography), HPLC (High Pressure Liquid Chromatography) and
HPTLC (High Pressure Thin Layer Chromatography) techniques are being used.
Identification of compounds employs a form of spectroscopy (mass, UV, IR, NMR)
to indicate the molecular structure. Some property of compound like optical
rotation, enantiomer, specific gravity and polarization are also play important
role for the identification of compounds.