someone took a crystallography class or twoAnother great way to reduce impurities (besides the water washes, which I highly recommended a sodium carbonate 5% solution wash too) is to do a recrystallization of the product.
Take fresh boiling naphtha and slowly add it with stirring to your product. There’s a couple ways to do this but one is to only go for the DMT crystals trying to leave behind yellow/orange gunk. The DMT is more soluble but with enough time and heat both will go, so it’s a delicate and quick process.
Quickly remove the naphtha and now bring it down in temperature as slow as possible. One way to do this is leave it in a hot water bath but let it cool off all together. This will slow the rate of cooling. Next put it in the fridge in a small cooler to help slow the cooling process in there. Finally to the freezer same way. Each time make sure you minimally move it, go as slow as a sloth on heroin. Too much movement can crash it out faster than you want. The slower you go the more pure the crystals will be.
-GC
someone took a crystallography class or two
First off the majority of DMT is found in the root bark. I could be wrong but I've never heard of anyone extracting the flowers.Witch would have more to extract a big tree of mimosa hostiles or the smaller sprouts
Another little trick which applies only to evaporative crystallization, is to dissolve everything, and put in pyrex dish that is not completely flat but slightly angled. Then forget about it for a few days.Take fresh boiling naphtha and slowly add it with stirring to your product. There’s a couple ways to do this but one is to only go for the DMT crystals trying to leave behind yellow/orange gunk. The DMT is more soluble but with enough time and heat both will go, so it’s a delicate and quick process.
He's not a chemist. Organic layer/Napatha is washed with sodium bicarbonate in order to deprotonate compounds with carboxylic groups, especially when the organic layer is derived from an acidic solution.Also GC, what is the point of a bicarb wash? You're already starting with something basic, and traditionally bicarb washes are to react any residual acids.
First post...this thread is another reminder that you should do proper research before you perform an extraction![]()
First post...
I couldn't agree more with your reminder....could you please point me in the direction of this "proper research" about the extraction process?
AdvTHANKSance,