Extracting limonene from oranges

RSC Education Coordinators

Peel away the mysteries of this plant oil in a comprehensive class practical. Students can distil plant oils from oranges and discover the role of limonene in these fruits.

Introduction

This experiment demonstrates the extraction of plant oils. The peel of oranges is boiled in water and the oil produced (limonene) distilled in steam at a temperature just below 100°C, well below its normal boiling point.

The immiscible oil can then be separated. Direct extraction by heating would result in decomposition whereas steam distillation does not destroy the chemicals involved. This experiment can be conducted as a demonstration at secondary level as an introduction to some of the ideas about the extraction of plant oils.

This demonstration will take a full lesson of approximately 50 minutes, it can also be conducted as a class practical at key stages 4 and 5. Limonene is an unsaturated hydrocarbon which can be tested for using bromine water or potassium manganate (VII).

At a higher level, it is also a chiral compound and the experiment can lead to a discussion of optical enantiomers.

Equipment

Apparatus

Chemicals

Health, safety and technical notes

See below for the appropriate construction of a limonene distillation apparatus.

A diagram showing the appropriate set-up to create a limonene distillation apparatus

Source: Royal Society of Chemistry

Diagram of limonene distillation

Procedure

Stage 1

  1. Grate the outer orange coloured rind of two oranges and add to 100 cm 3 of distilled water in the 250 cm 3 round bottomed flask. Add anti-bumping granules to the round bottomed flask.
  2. Set up the distillation apparatus as shown above.
  3. Heat the flask so that distillation proceeds at a steady rate, approximately one drop per second of distillate. (Note: take care not to let the liquid in the round bottomed flask boil too strongly).
  4. Collect approximately 50 cm 3 of distillate in the measuring cylinder. The oil layer will be on the surface.
  5. Using a dropping pipette, carefully remove the oil layer into a test tube for the next stage.

Stage 2

Odour

  1. Cautiously smell the extracted oil by wafting the fumes towards the nose. Do not breathe in directly from the test tube.

Action of bromine water

  1. Measure out approximately 1 cm 3 of bromine water into each of three test tubes.
  2. Add a few drops of the limonene oil to one test tube, a few drops of cyclohexane to another, and a few drops of cyclohexene to the third. Place in the bungs and agitate. If the bromine water is decolourised the molecule contains double bonds.
  3. 0.001 M potassium manganate(VII) can be substituted for the bromine water for class use. However, students need to know the action of bromine water.

Notes

The chemical structure of two different forms of limonene

The chemical structure of two different forms of limonene

Downloads

Extracting limonene from oranges - teacher notes

Additional information

This practical is part of our Chemistry for non-specialists collection. This experiment was written by Andrew Thompson on behalf of the RSC.