Oo Fragrance Table · Chemistry of Oo Olfactive Taxonomy

Chemistry of Oo · Olfactive Taxonomy · v1.0

The fragrance
periodic table

An open classification system for fragrance accords. 27 elements, ordered by molecular weight. A shared language for perfumers, educators, researchers, and developers.

Fragrance has never had
a periodic table.

Colour has Pantone.
Music has MIDI.
Fragrance has nothing.
Until now.

01 —

Behaviour,
not just identity

Most systems ask "what is this?" The Chemistry of Oo taxonomy asks "how does this perform?" Each accord is a coordinate in olfactive space — defined by molecular weight, volatility, and character — not just a category label.

02 —

Machine-readable
from the start

A fragrance profile expressed as Ro(P) · Am(S) · Mu(T) is a vector, not a word. It can be searched, compared, clustered, and used to train AI — enabling capabilities that descriptive systems simply cannot support.

03 —

Open and
community-governed

The schema is published under CC BY 4.0. Anyone can use it, build on it, or contribute to it. Changes go through a public RFC process. Chemistry of Oo maintains stewardship — not ownership — of the standard.

Select any element
to explore it

Historical ref
Top note
Heart note
Base note
Heavy base
Fu
Fougère
Cy
Chypre
Ci
Citrus
Al
Aldehyde
Aq
Aquatic
Oz
Ozone
Fr
Fruity
Pe
Peach
Te
Tea
Gr
Green
Ar
Aromatic
Fl
Floral
Vi
Violet
Mg
Muguet
Wf
White Flowers
Ja
Jasmine
Ro
Rose
Os
Orris
Sp
Spicy
Le
Leather
Or
Oriental
Va
Vanilla
Go
Gourmande
Am
Amber
Wo
Woods
Od
Oud
Mu
Musk

Example ingredients
In a profile

Classification as
a vector

A fragrance profile is expressed as a weighted accord vector. Three weights — Primary, Secondary, Tertiary — describe how prominently each accord features in the composition.

Example profile · a floral oriental
Primary
RoWf
Secondary
AmSpMu
Tertiary
AlVa
P
Primary
Dominant, immediately perceptible. Maximum 3 per formula.
S
Secondary
Clearly present but supporting the primary accords.
T
Tertiary
Detectable in context; nuance and depth, not character.

Built to be
built upon

The Chemistry of Oo taxonomy is published under CC BY 4.0. Use it freely in any product, research, or application — attribution required.

What PANTONE did for colour, what MIDI did for music — fragrance has never had its equivalent. Until now.

Chemistry of Oo · Oo La Lab · 2026
  • Download the specificationThe full v1.0 spec with classification guidelines, versioning, and RFC process. Citable, DOI-registered, versioned.
  • { }
    Machine-readable JSONAll 27 accords in structured JSON — code, name, tier, character, example ingredients. Free to integrate.
  • RFC processPropose additions or refinements via the public RFC process. 30-day comment period. Community-governed evolution.
  • Certified encoder programmeFor practitioners who classify formulas against the taxonomy. Coming soon — join the waitlist.
  • Cite this taxonomyChemistry of Oo Olfactive Taxonomy Specification, v1.0 (2026). oola-lab.com · DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20031930

The taxonomy improves
with wider use

Contribute a fragrance classification, suggest an ingredient, propose an RFC, or integrate the taxonomy into your own tools. The standard belongs to the community.