Molecular structure of Hedione, methyl dihydrojasmonate, chemical formula C13H22O3

Encyclopedia · Raw materials

Hedione

Hedione is a synthetic molecule synthesized by Edouard Demole at Firmenich (Geneva, Switzerland), patented in 1962. With its transparent luminous jasmine floral profile, it found its first high-dose use in Eau Sauvage by Dior in 1966 under Edmond Roudnitska.
Type · Synthetic molecule
Synthesis · Firmenich, Geneva, Switzerland, patent 1962
Family · Transparent jasmine floral

Origin

Hedione was synthesized by Swiss chemist Edouard Demole in the Firmenich laboratories in Geneva, Switzerland, starting from 1958. The patent was filed in 1962, the same year Demole published the complete characterization of the molecule in the organic chemistry literature. The trade name Hedione, registered by Firmenich, derives from the Greek hedone, meaning pleasure (Wikipedia: Methyl dihydrojasmonate; Perfumer and Flavorist, accessed 31 May 2026).

The molecule carries the IUPAC name methyl dihydrojasmonate, its chemical formula is C13H22O3, and its CAS number is 24851-98-7. It is structurally inspired by methyl jasmonate, present in trace amounts in jasmine absolute, and reproduces one precise facet of that material without imitating its indolic heaviness. Firmenich began marketing the molecule to perfumers in the early 1960s and built a long-running industrial program around it (PubChem; The Good Scents Company, accessed 31 May 2026).

Olfactive profile

Hedione offers a light jasmine floral profile, transparent and luminous. It evokes jasmine sambac stripped of its most animal facets, with a skin effect, a melting freshness and an almost watery clarity. Blind, the molecule is recognized by its capacity to open the olfactive space of a composition rather than imposing an identifiable note (Fragrantica; Bois de Jasmin, accessed 31 May 2026).

Its pyramid position covers the late top and the heart, with a lateral diffusion effect rather than a long tenacity. Its persistence on skin runs a few hours, well below that of a white musk or an ambery wood, but persistence is not its main function. Hedione fluidifies, lightens, and brings air to floral, citrus and woody accords.

The concentrations used in perfumery are among the highest of any single material. The molecule routinely runs from 15 to 30 percent of the formula in modern niche perfumery, and can reach 30 to 50 percent in some highly transparent contemporary compositions. At those levels it remains invisible to the casual nose but structures the perceived signature.

Hedione is the light of jasmine without its shadow. Roudnitska made it the central axis of Eau Sauvage and changed modern perfumery.Bois de Jasmin, Eau Sauvage analysis

Key characteristics

Olfactive family
Transparent jasmine floral, luminous, with a skin effect and a melting freshness.
Pyramid position
Late top and heart, fluidification function rather than tenacity.
Chemical formula
C13H22O3, methyl dihydrojasmonate, CAS 24851-98-7.
Usual concentration
15 to 30 percent in modern niche formulas, up to 30 to 50 percent in transparent contemporary compositions.

Synthesis and production

Hedione does not occur in nature. It is produced by an organic synthesis route developed by Edouard Demole in several steps, starting from cyclopentanoid precursors. The original 1962 Firmenich method runs through an aldol condensation, followed by hydrogenation and esterification with methanol. The final product is a mixture of isomers, of which the cis (-) isomer carries the largest share of the olfactive effect, which led Firmenich to develop enriched grades such as Hedione HC (Wikipedia: Methyl dihydrojasmonate; Perfumer and Flavorist, accessed 31 May 2026).

Several producers now supply the molecule to the perfumery industry:

  • Firmenich: historic producer, owner of the Hedione trade name and of the active-isomer enriched grades such as Hedione HC (High Cis) and Paradisone.
  • Givaudan, IFF, Symrise: major fragrance houses that offer the molecule under generic names or their own commercial labels.
  • Specialty and Asian producers: market entrants from the 2000s onward on standard grades, with a noticeable spread on the active-isomer ratio.

Hedione is today one of the most widely used raw materials in world perfumery, present in a very large share of contemporary floral, citrus and fougere compositions. The IFRA regulation does not impose severe restrictions on the molecule, its toxicological profile being favorable and its biodegradability acceptable for use at industrial scale (Firmenich; ECSA Chemicals; PubChem, accessed 31 May 2026).

History in perfumery

The first commercial perfume to feature Hedione at a high dosage is Eau Sauvage by Christian Dior in 1966, composed by Edmond Roudnitska. Roudnitska placed the molecule at the heart of a classic cologne citrus accord and obtained a floral freshness that had never been heard before. The fragrance inaugurated the post-1970 era of modern transparent perfumery and is still cited by the profession as the founding act of the large-scale use of synthetic floral materials (Persolaise; Fragrantica, accessed 31 May 2026).

Roudnitska continued the exploration with Diorella in 1972, where Hedione met honeysuckle and melon in a unisex composition that pushed transparency further. In 1976, the young Jean-Claude Ellena signed First for Van Cleef and Arpels, the first major modern aldehydic floral to fully exploit the molecule.

The 1990s confirmed Hedione as the star material of minimalist and aquatic perfumery. L'Eau d'Issey by Issey Miyake, signed by Jacques Cavallier in 1992, deployed the molecule in a lotus and aquatic flowers accord. CK One by Calvin Klein, signed by Alberto Morillas and Harry Fremont in 1994, pushed the molecule into mass consumption at high levels and tipped the decade toward unisex transparent perfumery.

Between 2000 and 2026, Hedione settled into almost the whole of contemporary niche perfumery. Houses such as Le Labo, Frederic Malle, Diptyque and Maison Francis Kurkdjian built it into regular components of their floral accords, and some compositions feature the molecule at levels above 30 percent of the formula without that being perceived as excessive by the broader audience.

Notable perfumes featuring Hedione

Six compositions return regularly in the specialised press as decisive moments in the history of Hedione, across the 1966 to 2008 arc. The selection covers the founding Roudnitska gesture, the late-1970s and 1990s consolidation, and the contemporary niche reading by Maurice Roucel at Frederic Malle.

YearHousePerfumeRole of Hedione
1966Christian DiorEau SauvageEdmond Roudnitska. First documented high-dose use, founding act of modern transparent perfumery.
1972Christian DiorDiorellaEdmond Roudnitska. Hedione paired with honeysuckle and melon in a unisex composition that pushed transparency.
1976Van Cleef and ArpelsFirstJean-Claude Ellena. First major modern aldehydic floral to fully exploit the molecule.
1992Issey MiyakeL'Eau d'IsseyJacques Cavallier. Hedione at the heart of a lotus and aquatic flowers accord, signature of the 1990s.
1994Calvin KleinCK OneAlberto Morillas and Harry Fremont. Hedione at high dose, unisex composition that took the molecule to global mass consumption.
2008Frederic MalleDans tes BrasMaurice Roucel. Hedione at high percentage in a heliotrope and violet accord, contemporary niche reading.

Frequently asked questions

What does Hedione smell like in perfumery?01
A light jasmine floral profile, transparent, luminous, with a skin effect and a melting freshness. The molecule evokes jasmine sambac without the indolic heaviness of the natural absolute, and fluidifies floral, citrus and woody accords.
Who invented Hedione and when?02
The molecule was synthesized by Edouard Demole at Firmenich in Geneva, Switzerland, starting from 1958, with the patent filed in 1962. Its trade name derives from the Greek hedone, meaning pleasure.
Which perfume first used Hedione at a high dosage?03
Eau Sauvage by Christian Dior, composed by Edmond Roudnitska and launched in 1966. The fragrance inaugurated the post-1970 era of modern transparent perfumery and is still cited as the founding act of the large-scale use of synthetic floral materials.
Which perfumes use Hedione as a signature?04
Eau Sauvage (Dior, 1966), Diorella (Dior, 1972), First (Van Cleef and Arpels, 1976), L'Eau d'Issey (Issey Miyake, 1992), CK One (Calvin Klein, 1994) and Dans tes Bras (Frederic Malle, 2008).
Is Hedione natural or synthetic?05
Fully synthetic. The molecule does not occur in nature and is produced at industrial scale by Firmenich and the other major fragrance houses, under the IUPAC name methyl dihydrojasmonate, formula C13H22O3.
What concentration of Hedione is used in modern niche perfumery?06
Hedione is one of the most heavily dosed molecules in modern perfumery. Typical use ranges from 15 to 30 percent of the formula in contemporary niche fragrances, and can reach 30 to 50 percent in highly transparent compositions, where it provides lateral diffusion and a luminous skin effect.

Sources

Published on May 31, 2026 · Updated on May 31, 2026 · Last fact check: May 31, 2026 · Osmetheca Editorial Team