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Home > Perfume


 

:For the book "Perfume" by Patrick Süskind, see Perfume (book).

Perfume is a mixture of fragrant essential oils, a fixative, and alcohol used to give objects (usually parts of the human body) a long-lasting and pleasant smell.


The essential oils are obtained by distillation of flowers, plants, and grasses, such as orange blossom and roses. Extraction by enfleurage is used if distillation is not possible, for example in the case of Jasmin Absolute. Enfleurage is basically extraction by absorption of aroma materials into wax and then extracting the odorous oil with alcohol. Aromatic chemicals are also used. Fixatives, which bind the various fragrances together, include balsams, ambergris, and secretions from the scent glands of civets and musk deer (undiluted these have unpleasant smells but in alcoholic solution they act as preserving agents). The amount of alcohol added depends on whether perfumes, Eaux de toiletteEau de toilette is a fragrance of relatively low odor intensity (5-10% aromatic oils) and originally intended to be used to refresh oneself. Eaux de toilette is either stronger, or of the same odor intensity as Eau de toilette., or Eaux de CologneEau de Cologne ( French for "water of Cologne"), or "cologne" for short, is a type of perfume. In its original formulation, it was an alcoholic and watery suspension or distillation of the oils of bergamot, lemon, orange and orange blossom, with the addit are required. The mixture is normally aged for 1 year.

1 Perfumes types and properties

A mixture of alcohol and water are used as the solvent for the aromatics. On application, body heat causes the solvent to evaporate quickly, leaving the fragrance to evaporate gradually over several hours. The rate of evaporation( vapor pressureThe vapor pressure is the pressure (if the vapor is mixed with other gases, the partial pressure) of a vapor. At any given temperature, for a particular substance, there is a pressure at which the vapor of that substance is in equilibrium with its liquid) and the odor strength of the compound partly determines the tenaciousness of the compound and determines it perfume note classification.



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