Jignles
Greenlighter
So this is a question I never find the answer to... I find a million threads that are always someone like, "Can I inject 2 day old blood into my body?" Lol, No. Not what I'm asking.
What I'm talking about is if there is a reliable way to separate a water soluble substance from a bloody missed shot? For example. Possibly boiling, filtering (with micron filters of a certain µm). Then either a dehydration or distillation process to seperate substance from any liquid.
Scientifically, it has to be possible since you can obviously seperate things to the molecular level and/or atomic level (hell, even split the atom). Different substances, liquids, elements have different boiling points, molar masses, etc...
Centrifugation exists, but the average person does not have a chemistry lab within their home.
Been quite a while since I've been into chemistry Been more in the tech field for many years, but used to know quite a bit of chemistry (I have forgotten way more than I remember at this point).
So long rant aside. Is there an somewhat simple method to let's say seperate blood, water, and a water soluble drug?
Would rather ask if someone already has the knowledge as opposed to doing a chemistry major thesis in my free time. Always been a person that tries not to waste anything in general. So just a thought that came across my mind. And my searches have not found a clear answer to this question (Although maybe I am not looking in the correct places for the answer).
What I'm talking about is if there is a reliable way to separate a water soluble substance from a bloody missed shot? For example. Possibly boiling, filtering (with micron filters of a certain µm). Then either a dehydration or distillation process to seperate substance from any liquid.
Scientifically, it has to be possible since you can obviously seperate things to the molecular level and/or atomic level (hell, even split the atom). Different substances, liquids, elements have different boiling points, molar masses, etc...
Centrifugation exists, but the average person does not have a chemistry lab within their home.
Been quite a while since I've been into chemistry Been more in the tech field for many years, but used to know quite a bit of chemistry (I have forgotten way more than I remember at this point).
So long rant aside. Is there an somewhat simple method to let's say seperate blood, water, and a water soluble drug?
Would rather ask if someone already has the knowledge as opposed to doing a chemistry major thesis in my free time. Always been a person that tries not to waste anything in general. So just a thought that came across my mind. And my searches have not found a clear answer to this question (Although maybe I am not looking in the correct places for the answer).
