Table of Contents
The extraction method used to produce an essential oil fundamentally determines its chemical composition, aromatic profile, physical properties, yield, and cost. For B2B buyers formulating products for cosmetics, food, fragrance, or pharmaceuticals, understanding how extraction method affects the final oil is critical to making correct specification decisions.
1. Steam Distillation
Steam distillation is by far the most widely used extraction method, accounting for approximately 93% of all commercial essential oil production. It works by passing steam through plant material; the steam volatilizes the essential oil components, and the mixed vapor is then condensed and separated into oil and water (hydrosol) fractions.
Sub-types
- Water distillation — Plant material submerged in boiling water. The oldest method. Suitable for delicate flowers (rose, neroli) where direct steam might cause clumping.
- Water-and-steam distillation — Plant material on a grid above boiling water. Most common for medium-scale production.
- Direct steam distillation — Steam generated externally and injected. Precise temperature/pressure control. Preferred for industrial scale.
Quality Characteristics
The heat of distillation (typically 100°C at atmospheric pressure) can cause chemical changes:
Chamazulene — the deep blue compound in German chamomile — is not present in the fresh plant but forms during steam distillation from matricin, a sesquiterpene lactone precursor. Similarly, some esters may hydrolyze and aldehydes may oxidize during extended distillation.
Yield is typically 0.5–3% of fresh plant weight. Exceptionally high-yielding crops like clove bud can reach 15–18%; low-yielding crops like rose may yield only 0.02–0.04%.
2. CO2 Supercritical Extraction
Supercritical CO2 extraction uses carbon dioxide pressurized above its critical point (31°C, 73.8 bar) as a solvent. CO2 exhibits density approaching a liquid (providing solvating power) while retaining the viscosity and diffusivity of a gas (enabling penetration of dense plant material).
Select vs. Total Extracts
- Select (SCO2) extracts — Produced at lower pressures (80–120 bar). Extract primarily volatile compounds, but with a more complete monoterpene profile than steam-distilled oils
- Total (TCO2) extracts — Produced at higher pressures (200–500 bar). Extract both volatile and non-volatile compounds — waxes, resins, pigments — producing a more viscous extract
CO2 extracts command a 2–5x price premium over steam-distilled equivalents due to higher capital equipment costs, smaller batch sizes, and longer cycle times.
3. Cold Pressing (Expression)
Cold pressing is used almost exclusively for citrus essential oils. Whole fruit passes through machines that pierce or abrade the peel, releasing the oil. Modern equipment processes 5–15 tons of fruit per hour.
Cold-pressed citrus oils are predominantly monoterpene hydrocarbons (limonene typically 90–97%). Non-volatile residues including carotenoids and furocoumarins are responsible for the phototoxic properties. The high monoterpene content makes these oils prone to oxidation — shelf life is typically 9–18 months.
4. Solvent Extraction
Solvent extraction is used primarily for delicate flowers (jasmine, tuberose, narcissus) that cannot withstand steam distillation heat. Plant material is washed with hexane, dissolving both volatile compounds and waxes. After filtration and solvent evaporation, the resulting concrete is washed with ethanol to produce the final absolute.
Absolutes contain a broader molecular weight range than steam-distilled oils, contributing depth and tenacity prized in fine fragrance. However, trace solvent residues may be a concern for food, pharmaceutical, or certified organic applications.
5. Choosing the Right Method
| Application | Recommended Method | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Cosmetics & Personal Care | Steam-distilled, CO2 select | Broad availability, predictable profiles, regulatory acceptance |
| Fine Fragrance | Absolutes, CO2 total, steam-distilled | Defined by aromatic complexity — rich top, body, and dry-down |
| Food & Beverage | Steam-distilled, cold-pressed | Regulatory constraints; solvent residues impermissible |
| Aromatherapy | Steam-distilled, cold-pressed | Traditional standards; cost-effectiveness |
| Pharmaceuticals | Steam-distilled, CO2 select | Regulatory requirements; pharmacopoeia monographs |
At Fresure, our manufacturing capabilities include industrial-scale steam distillation (170+ stainless steel stills), cold pressing for citrus oils, and solvent extraction for absolutes. We recently added CO2 supercritical extraction capacity, enabling us to offer CO2 select and total extracts. Contacto our technical team to discuss your requirements.