Agent Name
        Linalyl acetate
       
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
        Major Category
        Biological Agents
       
      
     
    
   
  Synonyms
  1,6-Octadien-3-ol, 3,7-dimethyl-, acetate; 3,7-Dimethyl-1,6-octadien-3-ol acetate; 3,7-Dimethyl-1,6-octadien-3-yl acetate; Acetic acid linalool ester; Bergamiol; Bergamol; Bergamot mint oil; Ex bois de rose (synthetic); Licareol acetate; Linalol acetate; Linalool acetate; Linalyl acetate (natural); Lynalyl acetate; [ChemIDplus]
 
  Category
  Plant Oils and Extracts
 
  Description
  Clear colorless liquid with an odor of bergamot; [Hawley]
 
  Sources/Uses
  Present in bergamot, lavender, and other volatile oils; [Merck Index] Used in perfumes, soaps, cleaning products, cosmetics, oil paints, and flavoring extracts; [HSDB]
 
  Comments
  Emergency treatment: "Linalool"; [HSDB] Included in list of "established contact allergens in humans"; [EC: Scientific Committee on Consumer Safety: Fragrance allergens in cosmetic products (2011)] Causes somnolence and ataxia and acts as a general anesthetic in lethal dose studies of rats; [RTECS] Safe when used as a flavoring agent in food; [JECFA] Hydrolyzed in the GI tract into linalool and acetic acid; Not a mutagen; Not likely to be a sensitizer; Linalool, a hydrolysis product, caused "hepatocellular cytoplasmic vacuolisation" in 28-day feeding studies of rats; [Reference #1] See "Linalool."
 
  Vapor Pressure
  0.111 mm Hg
 
  Odor Threshold Low
  6.06 ppm
 
  Lethal Concentration
  LC50 (mice) > 1,028 mg/m3/4h
 
  Explanatory Notes
  Odor threshold from CHEMINFO;
 
  NFPA
  high ambient temp required
 
  Neurotoxin
  Acute solvent syndrome
 
  Hepatotoxin
  Hepatoxic (a) from occupational exposure (secondary effect) or (b) in animal studies or in humans after ingestion
 
  Diseases
  
    Occupational diseases associated with exposure to this agent:
    
   
 
  Processes
  
    Industrial Processes with risk of exposure: