Hello, Guest!
 
 

 
 
  Objects Tiiips Categories
Peppermint oil
"Descrizione"
by Al222 (23254 pt)
2025-Oct-06 12:36

Peppermint Oil (Mentha piperita)
Synonyms/INCIMentha Piperita (Peppermint) Oil; peppermint essential oil
Botanical source: Mentha × piperita L. (hybrid of M. aquatica × M. spicata), flowering aerial parts

Definition
Natural essential oil obtained by steam distillation of the flowering tops/leaves of Mentha × piperita. Clear, colorless to pale yellow liquid with a strong, fresh, mentholic–camphoraceous odor and pronounced cooling effect.

Caloric value
~884 kcal per 100 g (theoretical for terpene-rich oils). Negligible caloric intake at typical use levels.

Principal constituents (ranges vary by cultivar, geography, and processing)

  • Menthol: 30–50%

  • Menthone: 15–30%

  • 1,8-Cineole (Eucalyptol): 3–8%

  • Menthyl acetate: 3–10%

  • Menthofuran: 1–10% (monitor)

  • Isomenthone, Neomenthol, Pulegone: trace–few % (pulegone typically <1–4%)

  • Minor terpenes (limonene, β-pinene, linalool) in trace–%

Production / extraction
Harvest → brief withering → steam distillation (water or direct steam) → oil/hydrosol separation → drying over sodium sulfate → filtration.
Variants: rectification (lower menthofuran/pulegone), winterization/crystallization of menthol (optional fractionation; “dementholized” oil remains greener, more herbal).

Physicochemical properties (typical)

  • Appearance: clear, colorless to pale yellow liquid

  • Density (20 °C): 0.900–0.916 g/mL

  • Refractive index (20 °C): 1.457–1.467

  • Optical rotation (20 °C): −24° to −32°

  • Flash point (CC): >60–70 °C

  • Solubility: sparingly soluble in water; miscible with ethanol/organic solvents; soluble in oils/fats

  • Stability: sensitive to oxygen, light, heat → protect with antioxidant (tocopherol) and dark, tight packaging

Olfactory profile

  • Top: bright, cold, mentholic

  • Heart: herbal, camphoraceous, lightly sweet

  • Drydown: clean, balsamic (menthol)

  • Sensory effect: strong cooling (TRPM8 activation)

Applications

  • Cosmetics/Personal care: toothpastes, mouthwashes, lip balms (low levels), aftershave gels, refreshing shampoos, sports gels, foot-care, soaps.

  • Flavor: confectionery, chewing gum, syrups, beverages, bakery (very low dosages; follow flavor regulations).

  • Pharma/OTC: topical rubs, muscle gels, inhalation patches; enteric capsules (GI use) per medical/regulatory guidance.

  • Fragrance: fougère/aromatic accords; soft insect-repellent blends.

Indicative use levels (validate in your matrix and per local rules)

  • Face leave-on: ≤0.2–0.5% (watch for sensitivity)

  • Body leave-on: 0.5–1.5% (up to ~2% in targeted “cooling” formats)

  • Rinse-off (shampoo/body wash): 0.3–2%

  • Lip balms: 0.05–0.3% (mucosa caution)

  • Oral care flavor: trace to ~0.5% depending on base and taste profile

Formulation compatibility
Good with anionic/amphoteric surfactants, light esters, vegetable oils, and waxes. Can plasticize some waxes in sticks. In O/W emulsions, dissolve in the oil phase; for aqueous sprays/mouthwashes use solubilizers (e.g., PEG-40 hydrogenated castor oil, polysorbates, polyglyceryl surfactants).

Safety and regulatory

  • Irritation/sensitization: possible at higher levels, especially on sensitive skin or mucosae. Patch test recommended.

  • Children: avoid concentrated use on face/nasal area in infants/young children (risk of laryngeal reflex/bronchospasm from menthol).

  • Pregnancy/lactation: use low levels or avoid prolonged exposure as a precaution.

  • EU cosmetic allergens: may contain Limonene and Linalool (declare if above thresholds).

  • Critical components: keep menthofuran and pulegone as low as reasonably achievable (prefer rectified oils/spec-compliant lots).

  • IFRA: follow the current IFRA Standard for the relevant product category.

  • Food: permitted as a natural flavor under positive lists; comply with category limits and GMP.

Quality & specifications

  • Identity by GC-MS/GC-FID vs monographs (e.g., ISO 856, Ph. Eur., USP).

  • Control menthofuran/pulegone per internal/regulatory targets.

  • Verify refractive index, density, optical rotation, residue on evaporation, heavy metals.

  • Shelf life: 24–36 months when stored cool, dark, and airtight; add tocopherol 0.05–0.2% for oxidative protection.

Sourcing & sustainability
Key origins: USA (Pacific Northwest), India, China, parts of Europe and North Africa. Prefer suppliers with traceability, pesticide-residue control, and sustainable agronomy; organic grades available.

Troubleshooting

  • Excess sting/tingle: reduce level; blend or partially substitute with menthyl lactate (smoother cooling) or spearmint fractions.

  • Haze in aqueous bases: raise solubilizer ratio or reduce oil load; optimize oil/solubilizer balance.

  • Oxidative off-note: add vitamin E, use amber packaging, minimize headspace.

  • Over-camphoraceous note: select lots with higher menthol / lower menthofuran, or round with menthyl acetate/spearmint.

Conclusion
Peppermint oil is a multifunctional classic delivering freshness, cooling, and a clean aromatic profile across cosmetics, oral care, flavors, and OTC topicals. Careful constituent control (high menthol, low menthofuran/pulegone), appropriate dosing, and oxidation management ensure effective, safe, and consistent performance.

Evaluate