024spectrometer and compared with the spectra derived from authentic compounds or with published spectra.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONThe compounds isolated and their relative abundance in cinnamon leaf, stem bark, and root bark oils are shown in Table I. Of the compounds identified, eight have not previously been reported in cinnamon oils. The new compounds were the monoterpene, terpinolene, the sesquiterpene, caryophyllene oxide, and six aromatic compounds (benzaldehyde, methyl chavicol, hydrocinnamaldehyde, 2-phenylethyl alcohol, 2-phenylpropyl acetate, and coumarin). A further 24 compounds that have not been previously found in cinnamon oils were tentatively identified and included ten monoterpenes (myrcene, cis-ocimene, trans-ocimene, fenchone, trans-linalool oxide furanoid form, linalyl acetate, bornyl acetate, borneol, geraniol, and geranyl acetate), three sesquiterpenes (Pselanene, y-cadenene, and farnesol), two aliphatic compounds (hexanol and nonanal), and nine aromatic compounds (2-phenylacetaldehyde, 2-phenylethyl acetate, benzyl alcohol, phenol, methyleugenol, methylisoeugenol, 2 -vinylphenol, vanillin, and 2-phenylethyl benzoate). Final identification of these volatiles awaits mass spectral analysis.Most compounds were found in all three oils but the composition of the oils was quite different. The major component in leaf oil was eugenol (-70%) with caryophyllene, linalool, and benzyl benzoate also of some quantitative importance. Cinnamaldehyde (75%) was the major component in stem bark oil with a contribution also from cinnamyl acetate and caryophyllene, while camphor (56%) was the major component of root bark oil with cineole, cu-terpineol, a-pinene, and limonene also of importance.