Tamanu oil explained

Tamanu oil is pressed from nuts of either Calophyllum inophyllum (usually) or Calophyllum tacamahaca (ati), tropical trees belonging to the Calophyllaceae family. The oil originates in Polynesia, where it continues to play an important cultural role.

Commercial uses of tamanu oil are predominantly for skin care. The oil has value and use as a fuel. Calophyllum inophyllum oil (CIO) is rich in antioxidants and contains UV-absorption properties.[1]

Other names

It is also called beauty leaf oil, calophyllum inophyllum seed oil, calophyllum inophyllum oil, kamani oil, calophyllum oil, calophyllum inophyllum essential oil, dilo oil, foraha oil, Alexandrian laurel oil, poon oil, nyamplung oil, domba oil, honne oil (Honge is used as biodiesel), oil, pinnai oil, fetau oil, punnai oil, oil, pinnay oil, kamanu oil, bitaog oil, tamanu nut oil, punna oil, takamaka oil (ambiguous), laurelwood oil (ambiguous), tacamahac oil (ambiguous), punnaga oil, fetaʻu oil, palo maria oil, ballnut tree oil, ballnut oil, btaches oil, beach calophyllum oil, or oil.

Production

Harvest of fruits

Fruiting takes place twice a year, in May and November. When ripe, the fruit is wrinkled and its color varies from yellow to brownish-red. Ripe and fallen fruits are collected from the bottom of the tree, by beating the limbs with a long hand stick, or hand-picked by climbing the tree.

A tamanu fruit produces a single large seed. The seed consists of a kernel 1.5 cm in diameter and enclosed in a soft- and a hard seed coat. It is 43–52% of the weight of the whole dry fruit, about 4 g. Fresh kernels contain 55–73% oil and 25% moisture;[2] the oil content increases to 70–75% when dry.[3] [4]

Seed processing and extraction

The seeds are decorticated by wooden mallets or by decorticators or by pressing under planks. Usually, the kernels are pressed in wooden and stone ghani.

Uses

The first neoflavone isolated in 1951 from natural sources was calophyllolide from C. inophyllum seeds.[5]

The fatty acid methyl esters derived from C. inophyllum seed oil meet the major biodiesel requirements in the United States (ASTM D 6751), and European Union (EN 14214). The average oil yield is 11.7 kg-oil/tree or 4680 kg-oil/hectare. In the northwest coastal areas of Luzon island in the Philippines, the oil was used for night lamps.[6] This widespread use started to decline when kerosene, and later electricity, became available. It was also used as fuel to generate electricity to power radios during World War II. A farmer in Nagappattinam district of Tamil Nadu, India, has successfully used the oil as biodiesel to run his 5-hp pumpset.[7]

In Southern India, the oil may have been useful in waterproofing cloth and is used as a varnish. An extract from the fruit was once used to make a brown dye to colour cloth. The oil can also be used to make soap.[8]

Properties and fatty acids

The oil is bluish-yellow to dark green and very viscous. It has a disagreeable taste and odour as it contains some resinous material that can easily be removed by refining. The concentration of resinous substances in the oil varies from 10 to 30%.[9] The main compounds of the seed oil are oleic-, linoleic-, stearic- and palmitic acids.

Physical characteristics

physical characterRange
Refractive index 30 °C1.460-1.470
Iodine value79-98
Saponification value190-205
Unsaponifiable matter1.5%, maximum
20-40
Moisture0.5%, maximum
Fatty acids present in oil
Fatty acid Percentage
Palmitic acid14.8-18.5
Stearic acid6.0-9.0
Oleic acid36-53
Linoleic acid16-29
Erucic acid2.5-3.5
Another source says the oil contains the following fatty acids:
Content
38%
Oleic acid34%
13%
12%

Other components include calophyllolide, friedelin, inophyllums B and P, terpenic essences, benzoic and oxibenzoic acids, phospho-amino lipids, glycerides, saturated fatty acids, and 4-phenylcoumarins.[10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Léguillier. Teddy. Lecsö-Bornet. Marylin. Lémus. Christelle. Rousseau-Ralliard. Delphine. Lebouvier. Nicolas. Hnawia. Edouard. Nour. Mohammed. Aalbersberg. William. Ghazi. Kamelia. Raharivelomanana. Phila. Rat. Patrice. 2015-09-25. The Wound Healing and Antibacterial Activity of Five Ethnomedical Calophyllum inophyllum Oils: An Alternative Therapeutic Strategy to Treat Infected Wounds. PLOS ONE. en. 10. 9. e0138602. 10.1371/journal.pone.0138602. 1932-6203. 4583440. 26406588. 2015PLoSO..1038602L. free.
  2. SEAHand Book-2009 by The Solvent Extractors' Association of India
  3. The Philippine Journal of Science . 1907 . Commercial Utilization of some Philippine Oil-Bearing Seeds; Preliminary Paper . Richmond, George P. . del Rosario, Mariano Vivencio . 444 . II .
  4. Dweck . A.C. . Meadows . T. . Tamanu (Calophyllum inophyllum) – the African, Asian, Polynesian and Pacific Panacea . International Journal of Cosmetic Science . 2002 . 24 . 6 . 341–348 . 10.1046/j.1467-2494.2002.00160.x . 18494888 . 21847865 . 18 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190119174227/https://pinkhorizons.com/content/Tamanu.2.pdf . 2019-01-19 . dead .
  5. Garazd. M. M.. Garazd. Ya L.. Khilya. V. P.. 2003-01-01. Neoflavones. 1. Natural Distribution and Spectral and Biological Properties. Chemistry of Natural Compounds. en. 39. 1. 54–121. 10.1023/A:1024140915526. 38062976. 0009-3130.
  6. News: Alexandrain Laurel, Undi, Undal, Sultan Champa. Gardentia. 2017-11-12. en-us.
  7. News: Prabu. M. J.. 2014-03-26. Using bio fuel to run an irrigation pump for five acres. en-IN. The Hindu. 2017-11-12. 0971-751X.
  8. Web site: Undi. www.svlele.com. 2017-11-12.
  9. Web site: Calophyllum inophyllum Species Information . Agroforestree Database . 2013-12-11 . 2019-08-27.
  10. Dweck. A. C.. Meadows. T.. December 2002. Tamanu (Calophyllum inophyllum) – the African, Asian, Polynesian and Pacific Panacea. International Journal of Cosmetic Science. 24. 6. 341–348. 10.1046/j.1467-2494.2002.00160.x. 1468-2494. 18494888. 21847865.