Chemometric Resolution for Baseline Identification of Amomum subulatum Roxb . Essential Oils through FTIR Spectroscopy Technique

Essential oil of Amomum subulatum is the complex mixture of various alkyl, alkanes, sulfonates, amines, alcohols, sulfoxides, trans RCH≡CHR and aromatic bending compounds. The FT-IR analysis of aromatic bending occurs on 845 cm with para C-H bend. A strong absorption band between 900 cm 675 cm indicated the presence of aromatic C=C. The alcoholic stretching detected on 1080 cm and 1169 cm with C-O stretching molecular motion in large cardamom. In our investigation, the frequency of 2943 cm and 2934 cm the C-H stretching occurred in alkyl group. The wave numbers of bands 2966 (C=CH2), 1358 (S=O Stretch), 1215 (C-N Stretch), 1053 (S=O Stretch) and 984 (C-H Bending) the functional group specify vinyl, sulfonates, amines, sulfoxides and trans RCH-CHR, respectively.


Introduction
Amomum subulatum Roxb.belongs to the family Zingiberaceae is well adopted to cultivation in the hilly areas of Uttarakhand, India [1] and other states such as Sikkim, West Bengal [2].It is mainly cultivated as spice however, also possesses several medicinal properties such as carminative, stomachic, diuretic and cardiac stimulant [1].The essential oil yield was reported to be between 2.5% to 3% for How to cite this paper: Bhandari, A.K., Baunthiyal, M., Bisht, V.K., Kaim, J.  technique is an advanced chemometric resolution technique through which primary identification of compounds present in essential oil has become possible.Furthermore, this technique is also used for the analysis of unresolved peaks using multivariate curve resolution [4].
Keeping this in view, the present study was designed to identify the presence of 1,8 Cineole in the A. subulatum essential oil grown in different agro-climatic regions of Uttarakhand, India.This is the base-line information on presence of 1,8 Cineole in A. subulatum essential oil.

Oil Extraction
The dried whole capsules were subjected to hydro-distillation for extraction of essentials oils using Clevenger apparatus for 6 hours at a temperature of 90˚C.
The collected concentrated oil was then subjected to anhydrous sodium sulphate to remove the moisture contents and then stored at 4˚C for further analysis.

Fourier Transforms Infrared Spectroscopy (FT-IR) Technique
The ATR-FT-IR spectra were recorded in a range between 8500 -485 cm −1 using a FT-IR (Make: Horizon MB, spectrometer and detector; Model 114,690 -131,082, TGS, apodization Cosine, Make-Horizon MS and S.No-1405772-001).Essential oil 5 -10 ml was placed on the surface of the diamond ATR crystal.The spectral International Journal of Organic Chemistry data were processed with Horizon MB Spectra software.Samples were scanned at 4 cm −1 resolution, accumulation: 100 scans.

Results and Discussions
The structure of 1,8 Cineole is provided in Figure 1.The FT-IR analysis of the essential oil of A. subulatum revealed the presence of different functional group such as, alkyl, vinyl, alkanes, sulfonates, amines, alcohol and sulfoxides (Table 1,    slightly as a function of orientation around the double bond, but it is less informative than the C-H information.Aromatic bending occurs on 845 cm −1 with para CH bend.A strong absorption band between 900 cm −1 to 675 cm −1 indicated the presence of aromatic C=C.The absorbance band at 1377 cm −1 revealed the presence of CH 3 bond for alkanes.From the spectra we can see clearly that although they show substantial overlap of each absorption spectrum of various components, each band represents an overall overlap of some characteristic absorption peaks of functional groups in the samples.Therefore, FT-IR spectrum reflecting objectively the panorama of chemical constituents in complex system is a most credible method to validate and identify the mix-substance systems such as traditional medicine and herbal medicine [5] 1, Figure 2).The result of the FT-IR analysis of essential oil of A. subulatum of seven different sites were found relatively identical for the 1,8 cineole compound (Figure 1).Earlier studies on essential oil of A. subulatum also revealed the presence of 1,8 cineole as a major compound Thus, finding of the present work on A. subulatum oils is used as analytical tool to check not only the primary identification of the compounds present in oils but also help in to further examine those compounds for their biological properties.

Conclusion
The results of the present study revealed the presence of 1,8-cineole in all the essential oils analyzed.Vinyl, alkyl, alkanes, sulfonates, amines, alcohols, sulfoxides, trans RCH≡CHR are the other important functional groups identified in the essential oil of A. subulatum grown in different agro-climatic regions of Uttarakhand, India.
C. and Negi, B.S. (2017) Chemometric Resolution for Baseline Identification of Amomum subulatum Roxb.Essential Oils through FT-IR Spectroscopy Technique.International Journal of Organic Chemistry,

Figure 2 )Figure 1 .
Figure 2).The functional groups present in essential oil were determined through evaluating the vibration frequencies in wave numbers of the sample spectrograph obtained from FT-IR spectrophotometer with those of a correlation with IR table.The vibration frequencies of the solvent were also obtained to aid in the determination of sample vibration frequencies.The saturated hydrocarbon C-H stretching absorption occurs below 3000 cm −1 .The alcoholic stretching detected on 1080 cm −1 and 1169 cm −1 with C-O stretching molecular motion in large cardamom.The position of the C=C stretching frequency does vary

3 O
International Journal of Organic Chemistry

Table 1 .
Wave number of band with molecular motion in vibration assignments for oils essential oils of A. subulatum (Roxb.)