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citral

Citral is a naturally occurring aroma chemical, a mixture of two geometric isomers: geranial (trans-citral) and neral (cis-citral). It is an acyclic monoterpene aldehyde with the formula C10H16O, responsible for the lemon odor characteristic of many essential oils.

Citral occurs in several essential oils, most notably lemongrass (Cymbopogon citratus), as well as lemon and

In flavor, fragrance, and consumer products, citral provides a strong lemon note and is used in foods,

Citral is volatile and can degrade upon exposure to air and light, forming oxidation products and polymers.

orange
oils.
Commercial
supply
comes
from
natural
extraction
of
these
oils
and
from
chemical
synthesis
using
terpenoid
precursors;
the
final
product
is
typically
a
mixture
of
geranial
and
neral
in
varying
proportions.
In
industry,
citral
can
be
produced
or
enriched
by
processes
that
transform
related
terpenoids,
yielding
a
concentrate
enriched
in
the
two
isomers.
beverages,
confectionery,
and
cosmetics,
as
well
as
in
cleaning
agents.
It
serves
as
a
versatile
building
block
for
fragrance
synthesis,
including
conversion
to
ionones
and
other
citral-derived
aroma
compounds.
It
is
a
skin
sensitizer
and
is
listed
as
a
fragrance
allergen
in
many
regulatory
frameworks,
with
labeling
considerations
for
cosmetics
and
other
products
containing
it.