desultoryendeavor
Rising Star
Just curious to the reason behind dissolving lye into water and then adding this to the acidic liquid containing DMT instead of adding it in directly.
I've done both without issues. Dissolving in water helps target pH more easily if that is desiredJust curious to the reason behind dissolving lye into water and then adding this to the acidic liquid containing DMT instead of adding it in directly.
Here's a tip or two when using pH papers - tear off a small scrap, just big enough to see the colour changes. This will help you get five times the usage out of your strips. And rather than dipping the strip into the solution, transfer a tiny drop onto the scrap of strip using a glass rod, fine glass pipette, or stainless steel tweezers. This prevents the loss of the test paper into the solution.pH papers are fine. Remember that solid lye will heat up when dissolved so go slow. It can replace the heath bath when done right, but be careful.
If you reduce the water too much it will become dense and more likely to cause emulsions.
Cheap pH meter probes won't last long with strong alkalies. If they're cheap enough you could get one to learn a bit of technique, but it's not as though you strictly need it right now for the extraction. It would make more sense to get one if you had a specific use case for it, like water quality monitoring or something, otherwise it's at risk of becoming a lump of electrical waste that you'll have to deal with. By contrast, the other option is essential a tiny scrap of paper.When looking on Amazon for pH paper I see they have cheap pH meters.
Would I be better off with paper than a cheap meter?
In fairness, they'd likely be OK for something less demanding than concentrated alkali, but you'd still need to calibrate them very frequently.Thanks. I didn't think they would be much good at those prices but thought it'd be worth asking.