Cangzhu
GREENS, HERBS AND FOUGERES / earthy · green · rich
Cangzhu
| Category | GREENS, HERBS AND FOUGERES |
| Subcategory | earthy · green · rich |
| Origin | |
| Volatility | Heart Note |
| Botanical | Atractylodes lancea |
| Appearance | Pale yellow to amber liquid |
| Odor Strength | Medium |
| Producing Countries | China, Japan, South Korea |
| Pyramid | Heart |
Woody-earthy, faintly camphorous, with medicinal-herbal depth. Cangzhu is TCM in aromatic form — the smell of a traditional Chinese pharmacy.
Scent
Evolution over time
Immediately
Immediately
Woody-earthy, camphorous, medicinal-herbal
After a few hours
After a few hours
Warm rhizome depth, less sharp, grounding
After a few days
After a few days
Persistent earthy-woody, dry medicinal trace
The Full Story
Did You Know?
Did you know?
Burning cangzhu rhizome to fumigate spaces during epidemics is documented during historical plague outbreaks and was revived during SARS in 2003. The volatile compounds have documented antimicrobial activity.
Extraction & Chemistry
Extraction method: Steam distillation of dried Atractylodes lancea rhizomes. Produced primarily in China. Contains atractylon, beta-eudesmol, hinesol.
| Molecular Formula | Key compound: atractylodin C₁₃H₁₀O |
| CAS Number | N/A — natural extract, no single CAS |
| Botanical Name | Atractylodes lancea |
| IFRA Status | No known restrictions |
| Synonyms | ATRACTYLODES · RHIZOMA ATRACTYLODIS |
| Physical Properties | |
| Odor Strength | Medium |
| Appearance | Pale yellow to amber liquid |
In Perfumery
Niche note providing TCM-inspired medicinal-woody character. Natural oil exists but not widely traded in Western perfumery. Functions in incense, medicinal, and East Asian-themed compositions.