1996
DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9673(96)00481-5
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Changes in chemical composition of catalytically hydrogenated orange oil (Citrus sinensis)

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Cited by 25 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Concernig the compostion of blood orange peel essential oil, our results are is in accordance with the results of Stahenko et al 12 , who reported the predominance of monoterpenes which are limonene, pinene, sabinene and myrcene in the essential oil of Citrus peels. Columbian Citrus sinensis essential oil were characterized by the presence of camphene, 3-carene and β-cadinene.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Concernig the compostion of blood orange peel essential oil, our results are is in accordance with the results of Stahenko et al 12 , who reported the predominance of monoterpenes which are limonene, pinene, sabinene and myrcene in the essential oil of Citrus peels. Columbian Citrus sinensis essential oil were characterized by the presence of camphene, 3-carene and β-cadinene.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
“…, 1998). Although extensive studies concerning chemical composition of citrus essential oils have been carried out in the past decades (Stashenko et al. , 1996; Dugo et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Romero y albahacas, tomillo y mentas, anís [1], orégano [2], mejorana, ruda [3,4], provienen del Mediterráneo; limonaria y citronela [5], jengibre, cítricos [6][7][8], vetiver, ylang-ylang [9][10][11], patchoulí (pachulí) llegaron de Asia, geranio, del sur de África; pero, hoy en día, estas son plantas comunes en Colombia, asilvestradas o cultivadas, que se utilizan ampliamente con diferentes propósitos, tanto en medicina popular, como en culinaria.…”
unclassified
“…En el Centro Nacional de Investigaciones para la Agroindustrialización de Especies Vegetales, Aromáticas y Medicinales Tropicales, CENIVAM, se han estudiado sistemáticamente varias especies vegetales aromáticas tanto exógenas [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11], como nativas, entre estas, Copaifera officinalis [17], Spilanthes americana [18], Lepechinia schiediana [19], Lippia alba [20], Xylopia aromatica [21], Hyptis umbrosa [22], Callistemon speciosus [23] y Lippa origanoides [24]. En estos estudios, se ha hecho el énfasis muy especial en la comparación de métodos de extracción de metabolitos secundarios volátiles [3, 11, 17-21, 25, 26], en el análisis de aceites esenciales y fracciones volátiles por cromatografía de gases (GC) con diferentes sistemas de detección [4,7,18]; así mismo, en el estudio de la transformación catalítica de aceites [1, 8,17] y en la investigación de la actividad biológica de extractos y aceites obtenidos [2,19,20,23,24,27,28].…”
unclassified