The volatile oil it produces is antiseptic and can purify indoor air. Jasmine has a pleasant scent when it opens, but do not place it in a closed bedroom for a long time, as prolonged sniffing of jasmine may lead to hair loss and pollen allergies. You can move it to a lighted window.
Jasmine, alias: Jasminumsambac, Latin name: Jasminumsambac (L.) Ait, Xylariaceae, Succinum genus of erect or climbing shrubs, up to 3 meters. Branchlets terete or slightly compressed, sometimes hollow, sparsely pilose. Leaves opposite, simple, blade papery, orbicular, elliptic, ovate-elliptic, or obovate, rounded or obtuse at both ends, base sometimes slightly cordate, slightly concave or concave above, raised below, veinlets often conspicuous on both surfaces, slightly raised, glabrous except for often tufted hairs in axils of veins below; lobes oblong to suborbicular, apex rounded or obtuse. Fruit globose, purple-black. Flowering period May-August, fruiting period July-September. Jasmine's flowers are extremely fragrant, for the famous flower tea raw materials and important flavor raw materials; flowers and leaves are used medicinally to treat eye redness and swelling pain, and have the effect of relieving cough and phlegm.