Online Encyclopedia

CAMPHORS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 136 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CAMPHORS  , organic chemical compounds, the

alcohols and
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ketones of the
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hydrocarbons known as
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terpenes, occurring associated with volatile oils in many
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plants . They are extracted together with volatile oils by distilling certain plants with steam, the volatile oils being subsequently separated by fractional distillation . The
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term " camphor " is generally applied to the solid products so obtained, and hence includes the " stearoptenes," or solid portions of the volatile oils . They are mostly white crystalline solids, possessing a characteristic odour; theyare sparingly soluble in
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water, but readily dissolve in
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alcohol and ether . Chemically, the camphors may be divided into two main groups, according to the nature of the corresponding
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hydrocarbon or terpene . In this article only the camphors of commercial importance will be treated; details as to the chemical structure, syntheses and relations will be found in the article TERPENES . Menthol, mentha or
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peppermint camphor, C10H190H, 5-methyl-2-isopropyl hexahydrophenol, an oxyhexahydrocymene, occurs in the volatile oils of Mentha piperita and M. arvensis (
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var. piperascens and glabrata), from which it is obtained by cooling and subsequently pressing the separated crystals; or by fractional distillation . It crystallizes in prisms, having the odour and taste of peppermint; it melts at 42° and boils at 212° . It is very slightly soluble in water, but readily dissolves in alcohol and ether . It is optically active, being laevo-rotatory . Menthol is used in
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medicine to relieve pain, as in rheumatism, neuralgia, throat affections and toothache . It acts also as a
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local anaesthetic, vascular stimulant and disinfectant .

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Thymol,
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thyme camphor, C10H130H, 3-methyl-6-isopropyl phenol, an oxycymene, occurs in the volatile oil of Ajowan, Carum ajowan, garden thyme, Thymus vulgaris, wild thyme, T . Serpyllum and horse mint, Monarda punctata . Thymol crystallizes in large colourless plates which melt at 440 and
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boil at 230° . It has the odour of thyme, is sparingly soluble in water, but very soluble in alcohol, ether and in alkaline solutions . In medicine it is used as an antiseptic, being more active than phenol . Iodine and potash convert it into di-iodthymol, which has been introduced in surgery under the names aristol and annidalin, as a substitute for iodoform . Borneol,
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Borneo camphor or camphol, also known as Malayan, Barus or Dryobalanops camphor, C1oH170H, occurs in fissures in the wood of Dryobalanops aromatica, a majestic tree flourishing in the East Indies . This product is dextro-rotatory; the laevo and inactive modifications occur in the so-called baldrianic camphor . Borneol melts at 203° and boils at 212° . It is very similar to
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common or
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Japan camphor, but has a somewhat peppery odour . Sodium and alcohol reduce common camphor to a mixture of d- and l-borneol . Common camphor, Japan or
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Laurel camphor, C10H160, which constitutes the bulk of the camphor of commerce, is the product of the camphor laurel, Cinnamonum camphora, a tree flourishing in Japan, Formosa and central
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China .

It also occurs in various volatile oils, e.g.

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lavender,
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rosemary, sage and spike . To ex-tract the camphor, chips of the tree are steamed, and the mixed vapours of camphor, volatile oils and water are conducted to a condensing plant, where most of the camphor separates out . This is filtered, and the remainder, about 20 % of the
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total, which is retained in solution, is extracted by fractional distillation and cooling the distillate . The crude camphor so obtained is exported from Japan in two grades—Samuel A and
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Samuel B . It is purified by mixing with a little
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charcoal, sand, iron filings or quicklime and subliming, by steam distillation or by crystallization . Common camphor forms a translucent mass of hexagonal prisms, melting at 175° and boiling at 204° . It sublimes very readily . In alcoholic solution it is dextro-rotatory; the laevo form, Matricaria camphor, occurs in the oil of Matricaria parthenium and closely resembles the d form . Camphor is chiefly used in the celluloid industry . The so-called " artificial camphor " is pinene hydrochloride (see TERPENES) . Externally applied it acts medicinally as a
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counter-irritant, and, in some degree, as a local anaesthetic, being also a definite antiseptic . It is, therefore, largely used in liniments for the
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relief of myalgia, sciatica,
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lumbago, etc .

Combined with

chloroform, thymol or carbolic acid, it is a valuable local application for neuralgia and for toothache due to dental
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caries . Taken internally, camphor is a nerve stimulant, a diaphoretic and a feeble antipyretic . It is excreted by the kidneys as various substances, including campho-glycuric acid (Schmiedeberg) . In large doses it causes marked
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nervous symptoms, exhilaration being followed by abdominal pain, violent epileptiform
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convulsions, coma and
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death . Its
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internal uses are in
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hysteria, and in such conditions as diarrhoea, 'dysentery and cholera . It is a popular remedy for " cold in the head," but it is not to be relied upon as a prophylactic against infection either by an ordinary cold or true influenza .

End of Article: CAMPHORS
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DIRK RAFELSZ CAMPHUYSEN (1586—1627)

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