Neoabietic Acid as the Primary Acid of Scots Pine Oleoresin
I. I. Bardyshev, V. V. Kokhomskaya, and L. I. Ukhova
Submitted 1957-01-01 | SovietRxiv: ru-195701.66204 | Translated from Russian

Abstract Generated abstract

This paper examines the composition of resin acids in Scots pine oleoresin and argues that neoabietic acid is a primary constituent. Crystalline resin acids were fractionated through sodium and diethylamine salts, with levopimaric acid removed in one procedure by maleic anhydride, followed by repeated crystallization from acetone and decomposition with boric acid. The isolated neoabietic acid was characterized by melting point, optical rotation, elemental analysis, titration, and ultraviolet absorption spectra, giving values consistent with the formula C20H30O2 and showing higher melting point and specific rotation than previously reported samples.

Full Text

CHEMISTRY

I. I. Bardyshev, V. V. Kokhomskaya, and L. I. Ukhova

NEOABIETIC ACID—THE PRIMARY ACID OF SCOTS PINE OLEORESIN

(Presented by Academician B. A. Arbuzov, July 4, 1956)

The individual resin acids comprising the oleoresin of Scots pine (P. silvestris) growing within the USSR should be considered to be levopimaric, dextropimaric, and abietic acids \((^{1,2})\). The question of the existence of \(\alpha\)- and \(\beta\)-sapinic acids is controversial \((^{3})\).

In the present work it is shown that neoabietic acid (1) is the primary acid of the oleoresin of Scots pine.

\[ \begin{array}{c} \text{H}_3\text{C}\quad \text{COOH}\\ \text{[structural formula of neoabietic acid]}\\ \quad\quad =\text{C}\left(\text{CH}_3\right)_2 \end{array} \]

Experimental Part

Crystalline resin acids were filtered off from the liquid portion of the oleoresin, recrystallized from methanol, and, by the usual method \((^{1})\), converted into sodium salts. The crystals of the sodium salts were filtered off, and the filtrate was decomposed with boric acid. In this way two acid fractions were isolated with \([\alpha]_D -82^\circ\) and \([\alpha]_D -63^\circ\) (the specific rotation was always determined in a 1% alcoholic solution).

From 100 g of acids with \([\alpha]_D -63^\circ\) (Fig. 1, 1), levopimaric acid \((^{4})\) was removed by means of twice-distilled maleic anhydride, and the remaining resin acids with \([\alpha]_D +52^\circ\) (Fig. 1, 2) were converted into diethylamine salts. By fourfold crystallization of these salts from acetone and subsequent decomposition of the salt with boric acid, neoabietic acid was obtained with m.p. \(178—180^\circ\) and \([\alpha]_D +172^\circ\) (Fig. 1, 4). Elemental analysis and titration of the acid confirm the formula \(\mathrm{C}_{20}\mathrm{H}_{30}\mathrm{O}_2\).

A second sample of neoabietic acid with m.p. \(177.5—179^\circ\) and \([\alpha]_D +175^\circ\) (Fig. 2, 5) was obtained from the same acid fraction without preliminary treatment with maleic anhydride, by simple fivefold crystallization of their diethylamine salt from acetone. The diethylamine salt of this acid fraction, separated from the filtrate, had m.p. \(112—117^\circ\) and \([\alpha]_D -19.6^\circ\) (Fig. 2, 6). In Fig. 2, curves 1, 2, 3, and 4 show the changes

of the specific absorption coefficient of the salt of this fraction during successive crystallizations. After the fifth crystallization the salt had m.p. 154–157° and \([\alpha]_D +121^\circ\). It should be noted that our samples of neoabietic acid

Fig. 1

Fig. 2

Fig. 1. Ultraviolet absorption spectra: 1 — initial mixture of resin acids; 2 — resin acids after removal of levopimaric acid; 3 — diethylamine salt of neoabietic acid; 4 — neoabietic acid.

Fig. 2. Ultraviolet absorption spectra: 6 — diethylamine salt of the initial resin acids; 1, 2, 3, and 4 — the same after successive crystallizations of the salt from acetone; 5 — neoabietic acid.

have higher values of melting point and specific rotation than the sample of this acid described in the literature\(^5\).

Institute of Chemistry
Academy of Sciences of the BSSR

Received
2 VII 1956

CITED LITERATURE

\(^1\) V. N. Krestinskii, S. S. Malevskaya et al., ZhPKh, 12, No. 12, 1839 (1939).
\(^2\) I. I. Bardyshev, L. I. Ukhova, DAN, 109, No. 1 (1956).
\(^3\) B. A. Arbuzova, Izv. AN BSSR, No. 1, 95 (1940).
\(^4\) G. C. Harris, T. F. Sanderson, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 70, 2079 (1948).
\(^5\) G. C. Harris, T. F. Sanderson, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 70, 334 (1948).

CORRECTION

In the article by I. I. Bardyshev and L. I. Ukhova, “Abietic Acid—the Primary Resin Acid of the Oleoresin of Scots Pine,” published in DAN, vol. 109, No. 1, p. 90, 1956, a misprint was made. For low-melting abietic acid \([\alpha]_D = -11.6^\circ\) was given; it should be

\[ [\alpha] = -116.7^\circ \]

Submission history

Neoabietic Acid as the Primary Acid of Scots Pine Oleoresin