Ascaridole was the first, and for a long time only, discovered naturally occurring
organic peroxide. It was isolated from
Chenopodium oil and named by Hüthig in 1908. He found that when heated to between 130° and 150 °C "there occurs, with sudden boiling in which the temperature momentarily rises to about 250°, a decomposition of an explosive character, occasionally accompanied by ignition. At the same time a very disagreeable skatol-like odour, difficult to define, is observed. In the course of the examination it was found that during the decomposition a gas is split off." He determined its chemical formula as C10H16O2. Hüthig also noted the indifference of ascaridole to
aldehydes,
ketones or
phenols that characterized it as non-
alcohol. When reacted with
sulfuric acid, or reduced with
zinc powder and
acetic acid, ascaridole formed
cymene. A detailed study was done by E. K. Nelson in 1911. He described the decomposition as apparently a molecular rearrangement, and found that it reacts with sulfuric,
hydrochloric,
nitric, or
phosphoric acids. Nelson showed that the new substance contained neither a
hydroxyl nor a
carbonyl group and that upon reduction with
iron(II) sulfate it formed a
glycol, now known as
ascaridole glycol, C10H18O3. The glycol is more stable than ascaridole and has a higher
melting point of about 64 °C,
boiling point of 272 °C, and
density of 1.098 g/cm3. Nelson also predicted the chemical structure of ascaridole which was almost correct, but had the peroxide bridge not along the molecular axis, but between the other, off-axis carbon atoms. This structure was corrected by
Otto Wallach in 1912. The first laboratory synthesis was demonstrated in 1944 by Günther Schenck and
Karl Ziegler and might be regarded as mimicking the natural production of ascaridole. The process starts from α-
terpinene which reacts with oxygen under the influence of
chlorophyll and light. Under these conditions
singlet oxygen is generated which reacts in a
Diels–Alder reaction with the diene system in the terpinene. Since 1945, this reaction has been adopted into the industry for large-scale production of ascaridole in Germany. It was then used as an inexpensive drug against intestinal worms. ==Properties==