Guest guest Posted February 8, 2003 Report Share Posted February 8, 2003 Hey Carmen and other good folks, You won't believe this maybe .. but I spent the last hour cutting this back .. by maybe 65% .. and it still might be too long. Most of this is not important to the end-user but I'll throw it out to those who want it and try to keep it short as I can. GC means Gas Chromatography - it's an analysis of an essential oil or other solvent to determine the chemical profile - sort of like a blood test but a lot more complicated and more expensive. Tells you what's there and in what percentage. Then there's a test called GC/MS which is GC plus Mass Spectroscopy - and to simplify it's a mass detector to determine the specific gravity or molecular weight of a given chemical component. Refractive Index and Optical Rotation are further tests to determine purity and quality of an oil, but they are becoming less important due to technological advances Then we get into Optical Rotation or Optical Chirality which detects the way certain chemicals rotate a beam of light - to the left or the right or whatever. Chiral chromatography is the identification, isolation and separation of enantiomeric compounds. It gets into polar and non-polar environments and enantioselectivity, etc. Forget the above unless you are interested in learning more. ;-p Another technique is GC/FT-IR .. Gas Chromatography/Fourier Transform Infrared Spectophotometry. This technique is also useful for analysis of EOs since it's possible to create archieves or use commercial PC libraries during the analysis. But its not as popular and simple as GC/MS and it doesn't help the one paying for the analysis as much as it does the analyst .. so forget it. There are a dozen or so techniques other than GC/MS, Infrared or Planar Chromotography being a couple of those in fairly common use, but GC/MS is an established and reliable technique for analyzing essential oils and unless we get into something deep - not likely as we're not into chemistry projects, it's as much as we'll ever need - or wanna pay for. Its all you'll get from me and more than you'll get from most folks. The finest equipment can be defeated by a weak analyst - technicians must know what they're looking for .. need a standard for comparison - that is, they need to know what should be the profile of a typical sample of Origanum vulgare produced from wild-grown plants harvested in Central Anatolia or the expected results of a Lavandula stoechas from France versus one from Turkey - there will be differences, and that's a another very important reason to know the ORIGIN of an oil. The analyst looks at the chemical profile to see if it fits within the " footprint " or " range " they think is acceptable for the oil .. because even a pure oil can be a mediocre oil. Pure but Mediocre oils should be sold as commercial oils to the food, pharmaceutical and soaping industries because when they finish playing with them they'll have lost the original identity anyway. Unfortunately, many lower grade oils make it into the Aromatherapy/Cosmetics market. Smart chemists can fool a GC but distillers from third world or emerging markets can't manipulate oils very well and generally wouldn't mess with it if they could as it's expensive and time-consuming. French labs are good at this, especially with 40/42 lavender which is manipulated in a well-equipped lab. The Great Spirit doesn't allow the same growing conditions year after year but perfumers want consistency in lavender so they doctor it up a bit. It takes more than GC/MS to detect this - but Chiral Column testing can usually do it if the analyst is experienced. Normally, they don't try to deceive you, they just sell the 40/42 and it's up to a buyer to know what they're getting cause sellers of 40/42 lavender often don't know themselves what they have. I've said and written many times before, Caveat Emptor. An experienced analyst looks for what's not there as well as for what's there - if you increase one side of an equation, you decrease the other side - pure physics. Absence of a chemical that's normally detected at ..01% tells a lot to the smart analyst. If I increase major chemicals to get a more favorable product, I'm lowering the percentage of minor trace components - and we don't really know exactly why a particular oil has therapeutic value but as we know the Great Spirit didn't put unnecessary chemicals in the oil to fill a void we logically conclude that upsetting that natural synergy has negative effects on the therapeutic value. Many people tell you their EOs are GC tested and its often pure hogwash. Generally, they're told that by their source and they believe it (wanna believe it) and just pass along the information - they are generally niave, not dishonest, but I see it as being a little bit irresponsible because I believe we should trust everyone but always lock our car. If someone tells you their oils are GC tested, ask them to put up or shut up. You'll probably get a lot of shuck and jive but no GC! Without Lot Numbers there is potential for a seller to create an alibi of error but with Lot Numbers, if they're caught short there's no avenue of escape. Sellers who buy but 16 ounces from a source that does not provide them a GC can't afford to pay $150 and up to test that 16 ounces of oil so they're running on luck and/or guts. Most laypersons can't read a GC so I generally have the analyst make comments at the end that can be understood by the average buyer. Also, I refuse many of the oils I test .. they're pure .. but mediocre. I won't say that folks making soap need to buy tested oils because they can get by with PURE commercial grade oils .. purely from a point of safe use. BUT if the oil you're buying for soap contains 50% synthetic chemicals that cost $5 a kilogram and you're paying $50 a kilogram for the oil, it's not a matter of just safety - it's a matter of getting ripped off. MANY people and companies in this industry have been caught selling adulterated essential oils .. it's a matter of greed. All (including commercial grade) unadulterated essential oils are safe if used correctly and responsibly but some require a lot more attention to detail. Adulterated oils can be harmful depending on the nature of the adulterant used and some folks aren't as ethical as others - this holds true for Fragrance Oils as we have no idea what they contain. And a pure oil can be dangerous if the user is careless or irresponsible. Was the explanation short enough ?? .. ;-) Ask me questions if you have any .. I'll answer tomorrow cause its after midnight here and I worked all night last night .. gonna sack out now. But afore that I'll tell you that I am NOT an analyst .. I have mine done by smarter folks .. but I can read and compare them and that's enough for me. Y'all keep smiling, Butch http://www.AV-AT.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.