The Smelling Principle of Vetiver Oil, Unveiled by Chemical Synthesis.
Jie OuyangHanyong BaeSamuel JordiQuang Minh DaoSandro DossenbachStefanie DehnJulia B LingnauChandra Kanta DePhilip KraftBenjamin ListPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Vetiver oil, produced on a multiton-scale from the roots of vetiver grass, is one of the finest and most popular perfumery materials, appearing in over a third of all fragrances. It is a complex mixture of hundreds of molecules and the specific odorant, responsible for its characteristic suave and sweet transparent, woody-ambery smell, has remained a mystery until today. Herein, we prove by an eleven-step chemical synthesis, employing a novel asymmetric organocatalytic Mukaiyama-Michael addition, that (+)-2-epi-ziza-6(13)en-3-one is the active smelling principle of vetiver oil. Its olfactory evaluation reveals a remarkable odor threshold of 29 picograms per liter air, responsible for the special sensuous aura it lends to perfumes and the quasi-pheromone-like effect it has on perfumers and consumers alike.