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Liquid C‐18 saturated acids derived from linseed oil
Author(s) -
Friedrich J. P.,
Teeter H. M.,
Cowan J. C.,
McManis G. E.
Publication year - 1961
Publication title -
journal of the american oil chemists' society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.512
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1558-9331
pISSN - 0003-021X
DOI - 10.1007/bf02633576
Subject(s) - linseed oil , chemistry , monomer , iodine value , organic chemistry , sodium hydroxide , acetone , polymer , chromatography
Liquid C‐18 saturated monocarboxylic acids that fail to crystallize at 蜢70ŶC. have been prepared from linseed oil, linolenic acid, and tung oil. Heating one part of linseed oil in three parts of glycol (weight‐volume ratio) at 295ŶC. for 1 hr. with 25% excess sodium hydroxide, followed by distillation and hydrogenation of the resulting free fatty acid monomers and separation of the straight‐chain components by low temperature crystallization from acetone, yielded these liquid acids. The relative proportions of cyclic acids, straight‐chain monomeric acids, and polymer varied with the type of starting material and with the conditions employed. Cyclic acids in excess of 30% yields were obtained from linseed oil. Some hydroxylation of the fatty acids apparently takes place during cyclization; the amount increases with ascending temperatures, as evidenced by a rise in polyester content of the polymer fraction. Evidence indicates that the bulk of the unhydrogenated cyclic acids are vicinal disubstituted cyclohexadienes. Gas chromatography of the cyclic acids hydrogenated to an iodine value <1 shows that there are several components. These have not as yet been separated and positively identified.