Physical properties Grayanic acid forms radiating clusters of colourless needles upon crystallisation, and has a melting point of 186–189°C. It dissolves readily in
ethyl acetate,
methyl acetate,
ethanol, and
chloroform, is sparingly solubility in
benzene, and is insoluble in
hexane and
petroleum ether. These solubility characteristics facilitate its extraction and crystallisation from lichen material. Synthetic material provided a more precise melting point, measured at 181.5–182.5°C. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy identifies signals at δ 0.89 (deformed triplet, methyl), 1.26 (broad signal, five methylene groups), 2.50 (singlet, methyl), 3.24 (broad signal, ArCH2), 3.83 (singlet, methoxy), and 6.62–6.72 (aromatic protons). Mass spectrometry detects a molecular ion peak at m/z 414 (M+, C23H26O7), with characteristic fragmentation patterns including peaks at m/z 396 (M+-H2O), 370 (M+-CO2), and 165 (A-ring fragment). High-resolution mass spectrometry verifies the molecular formula, providing an exact 414.1679. The compound has identical
Rf values across multiple solvent systems when compared with authentic natural samples. The compound
fluoresces blue under
ultraviolet light, a distinctive property. This fluorescence aids in studying its accumulation in laboratory cultures of the fungal partner. When the fungus is grown in
culture, grayanic acid forms visible extracellular deposits on aerial fungal filaments (
hyphae). These deposits appear as patches or bands along the hyphae, accumulating more densely in older regions farther from the growing tips. The deposits dissolve readily in
acetone or methanol, leaving only the fungal
cell walls' natural fluorescence.
Chemical properties The chemical behaviour of grayanic acid includes several distinctive reactions and spectroscopic characteristics. In ethanolic solution, it forms a violet colour with 1% ferric chloride, and a pale yellow colour with diazonium reagent. Its ultraviolet absorption spectrum shows two peaks (λmax): one at 258
nm (log ε 4.10), and another at 300–310 nm (log ε of 3.5). Infrared spectroscopy identifies structural features such as a chelated carboxyl group at 1650 cm⁻¹, a lactonic linkage at 1750 cm⁻¹, and benzenoid rings with bands at 1570 and 1610 cm⁻¹. The compound remains stable under
methanolysis, showing no changes after boiling in methanol for 18 hours. Nuclear magnetic resonance studies of grayanic acid in chloroform show
proton signals at τ = 9.10 (terminal methyl groups of long
alkyl chains), τ = 8.63 (intermediate methylenes), and τ = 6.75 (end methylenes attached to the benzene ring). These signals, compared with those of similar compounds, helped identify the positions of functional groups in the molecule. In acetone, benzene ring protons exhibit chemical shifts at 6.13, 6.66, and 6.80 ppm, matching the pattern of related compounds like sphaerophorin. systems (A, B, C), with each showing four visualization methods (LS, L, K, W). Spots in column LS correspond to reference standards 4 (congrayanic acid) and 5 (4-
O-demethylgrayanic acid). Thin-layer chromatography shows grayanic acid as a UV+ pale blue spot before heating, which becomes pale pinkish-brown with a UV+ purple hue after acid spray and heating. This chromatographic behaviour aids in identifying grayanic acid in complex lichen extracts, especially in chemotaxonomic studies distinguishing species like
Neophyllis melacarpa and
N. pachyphylla by their metabolite profiles. Grayanic acid displays characteristic behaviour in solvents and chemical tests. During bicarbonate solution tests, it forms an oily layer between ether and aqueous phases, in addition to its standard solubility properties. It fluoresces green when treated with
potassium hydroxide and
chloral hydrate but gives a negative result in the homofluorescein reaction. These chemical properties helped classify grayanic acid as an orcinol-type depsidone rather than a simple depside.
Reactivity Grayanic acid undergoes chemical transformations that aid in understanding its structure and reactivity. It readily forms a mono-acetate derivative (melting point 155–157°C) and can be converted to a methyl ether methyl ester (melting point 88–90°C). Acetylgrayanic acid is prepared by treating grayanic acid with
acetic anhydride and
sulfuric acid. The resulting crystals melt at 57–59°C after recrystallisation from benzene and
n-hexane. Under ice-cooling, potassium hydroxide converts grayanic acid into grayanoldicarboxylic acid, while
barium hydroxide treatment yields grayanolic acid. These reactions illustrate the compound's reactivity with bases and its capacity to form structurally distinct derivatives. Grayanic acid also shows characteristic solubility behaviour in chemical tests. For example, when shaken with aqueous sodium bicarbonate, it forms an oily layer between the ethereal and aqueous phases, a property that facilitates its separation during analysis. ==Occurrence==