Abstract

AbstractOleic safflower seed (UC‐1) produces an oil containing approximately 80% oleic acid and 12% linoleic acid. The oil is a source of high quality oleic acid, and fatty acids from the oil may be used without further separation in some applications where technical oleic acid is now used, since oleic safflower free fatty acids have a a higher oleic acid content than good commercial grades of oleic acid. A high purity oleic acid can be produced by urea fractionation. Ozonization of the oil followed by reductive cleavage yields pelargonaldehyde and nearly colorless aldehyde oils. Ozonization of a crude mixture of oleic safflower acids followed by oxidative cleavage provides high yields of azelaic acid and pelargonic acid. In contrast, ozonization of free fatty acids from polyunsaturated vegetable oils produces azelaic acid and mixtures of lower molecular weight carboxylic acids with smaller amounts of pelargonic acid. Furtherore, ozone consumption is lower and reaction time is shorter when oleic safflower acids are used in place of more highly unsaturated fatty acids.

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