tried it several times.
good for analysis, bioassay, not so much.
good for analysis, bioassay, not so much.
Infundibulum wrote:for one, the OH has its own pKa. there are three possible species of psilocin at its isoelectric point, none of them above 50%. deprotonating the amine at a pH > 9.37 means giving the OH a negative charge.
since the OH a polar side group with a proton donor and acceptor, it readily absorbs moisture and undergoes autooxidation from air. proximity to the beta carbon likely also gives it unique physical characteristics.
..so, anyone know what taking the pH to >8 creates? ..what compound would this be?3. No, even psilocybin "freebase" (a loose term here to describe net charge = zero, aka isoelectic point) which exists theoretically at a pH of 4, is still waaaay too polar to be pulled with xylene or other non-polar solvent.
Orion said:So this is the product so far dried out with MgSO4. It's like a layer of sticky film, just brittle enough to scrape up without any mess. Since I have plenty of hexane I will see if I can remove some gunk with it.
Michal_R said:Very interesting, Orion, thanks for sharing.
(1) Did you weight the gunk?
(2) How many pulls? Just one?
jamie said:does it smell like indole?
nen888 said:..interesting and thanks for the research Orion..
as for what's in there, just wanted to point out that in the 'Hoffman' technique posted earlier here, acetone and chloroform (NP solvent) are used to remove what's not psilocybin..so, the hexane pull would not be the alkaloid..
Orion said:nen888 said:..interesting and thanks for the research Orion..
as for what's in there, just wanted to point out that in the 'Hoffman' technique posted earlier here, acetone and chloroform (NP solvent) are used to remove what's not psilocybin..so, the hexane pull would not be the alkaloid..
Thank you, I saw that, I just wondered if it may have been possible some psilocybin, although not dissolved, could have been 'carried' into the solvent when I rinsed the resin in it. Personally I doubt it, but just to be sure I will recombine what that took out.
Chloroform is difficult for me to obtain but I have heard that psilocin is soluble in xylene, so that would be an extra step. I think If I did this again I would start with the acetone, then xylene, then methanol. Resin is kind of annoying to work with as solvents only contact the outer skin of it.
The Day Tripper said:What about a dual phase solvent defatting, or cleaning of the resin? That would bump up the cleaning ability vs just outer surface area defatting/cleaning. At least with cactus resin, the defatting worked alot better if i dissolved it in water, and washed with heptane and then limonene, vs just washing with those NP's and not dissolving it in water.
I know your standard water/hydrocarbon NP (like naptha/heptane) procedure isn't on the table, as your going to degrade your psilocin/psilocybin by hydrating it, but are there other solvents that would accomplish this without the degradation?
Might just work if you can find something that's polar enough to hold the alkaloid salts in solution, but not degrade them like water does, and a NP solvent that is not miscible with your polar solvent, and doesn't solubulize any of the actives, only the impurities.
I'd imagine there has to be a way using a dry alcohol + some other NP solvent.
Orion said:The Day Tripper said:What about a dual phase solvent defatting, or cleaning of the resin? That would bump up the cleaning ability vs just outer surface area defatting/cleaning. At least with cactus resin, the defatting worked alot better if i dissolved it in water, and washed with heptane and then limonene, vs just washing with those NP's and not dissolving it in water.
I know your standard water/hydrocarbon NP (like naptha/heptane) procedure isn't on the table, as your going to degrade your psilocin/psilocybin by hydrating it, but are there other solvents that would accomplish this without the degradation?
Might just work if you can find something that's polar enough to hold the alkaloid salts in solution, but not degrade them like water does, and a NP solvent that is not miscible with your polar solvent, and doesn't solubulize any of the actives, only the impurities.
I'd imagine there has to be a way using a dry alcohol + some other NP solvent.
The problem with that is that non polar solvents like hexane or naphtha really don't remove many impurities from mushrooms. Xylene and acetone mix, but even still, the impurities will likely be much more soluble in the polar phase, so they wouldn't migrate.
