This thread is for all of those that have accidentally mislabeled their LSD or spilled it on colored paper and now are unsure of whether what they have is really LSD and how much of it is on the paper...
I will briefly go through various methods of testing for LSD and substances that are easily mistaken for it. Please correct me if I'm wrong on any of these points.
Furthermore, if you have questions concerning this or related topics you can ask your questions in this thread. Please make sure to be abiding our attitude/rules, i.e. NO SOURCING TALK.
Testing for the presence of LSD or other substances is fairly easy. There are three ways to do it:
1) Reagents
Ehrlich, Marquis and Mecke test can be used to check for what is in your sample. If LSD is present
Ehrlich will turn pinkish purple
Marquis on drops will turn orange to brown
Marquis on blotter will turn brown
Mecke on blotter will turn brownish olive green to black
Mecke on drops will turn greenish brown to black
Depending on the substance(s) present the color of each of these reagents will be different and should be consulted using the color-charts usually provided with the testing kits. However:
2) TLC + Reagents
Eluent: methanol:ammonia - 2.5ml of 25% ammonia and 97.5ml methanol for 100ml eluent
Merck silica f254nm plates. Run next to caffeine. Use 254nm UV to visualize
LSD should appear as a single strongly blue spot around same height as caffeine. No other LSD substitutes shines strongly blue. Run confirmatory reagent test on top of spot under normal light afterwards.
3) Black light
SOURCE
To test for the quantity of LSD in a given sample as well as purity there are the following methods:
1) gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS)
SOURCE
2) HPLC + UV-vis spectroscopy
SOURCE
These tests require lab equipment most people will not have at home, so most likely you will have to send a sample to a testing lab, if available. This means that you on your own in all probability cannot determine the quantity of the LSD in a given sample.
Substances that are often "mistaken" for LSD:
DOB, DOI, DOM, DOC and other closely related drugs (DOx)
NBOMes (25I, 25B, 25C, 25D, 25I, 25IP, etc)
Bromo-DragonFLY
lysergamides such as ALD-52
5-MeO-AMT
I will briefly go through various methods of testing for LSD and substances that are easily mistaken for it. Please correct me if I'm wrong on any of these points.
Furthermore, if you have questions concerning this or related topics you can ask your questions in this thread. Please make sure to be abiding our attitude/rules, i.e. NO SOURCING TALK.
Testing for the presence of LSD or other substances is fairly easy. There are three ways to do it:
1) Reagents
Ehrlich, Marquis and Mecke test can be used to check for what is in your sample. If LSD is present
Ehrlich will turn pinkish purple
Marquis on drops will turn orange to brown
Marquis on blotter will turn brown
Mecke on blotter will turn brownish olive green to black
Mecke on drops will turn greenish brown to black
Depending on the substance(s) present the color of each of these reagents will be different and should be consulted using the color-charts usually provided with the testing kits. However:
Testing with a single reagent provides very limited discriminatory power, and single measurements leave no room for error since there's no additional checks done to ensure that the result is valid.
Contrary to popular belief these test reagents do not positively identify any drug. It's not a case of test with reagent X and if it turns a certain color then it must be substance Y. The testing is actually reductive. What we're trying to do is eliminate other possibilities with contradictory results up to a point where it seems most probable that one drug is present.
First we have to identify the other substances that might be present and that we need to be able to distinguish. In the case of LSD we're trying to distinguish it from other high potency hallucinogens such as the DOx series of psychedelic amphetamines, benzodifurans like bromo-dragonFLY, the NBOMe-2C series, 5-MeO-AMT etc.
Ehrlich reagent is an indole-reactive test. Ehrlich would therefore be expected to give a positive response to both LSD and 5-MeO-AMT since they are indoles, but not to the DOx series, bromo-dragonFLY or the NBOMe-2C series. A positive test with Ehrlich reagent would therefore make the presence of the latter substances improbable, while not contradicting that the substance may truly contain LSD.
We then need a second test to distinguish between LSD and 5-MeO-AMT. In the presence of LSD Marquis reagent turns olive green to black. Depending on the concentration 5-MeO-AMT should give a golden/brownish hue instead. It's important that the test is done at a suitable concentration so that the end color is not too intense, as deep gold/brown may look almost black. Again, an olive colored result would make the presence of 5-MeO-AMT improbable while not contradicting what would be expected if LSD were present.
Mecke reagent could then be used as an additional check to increase the confidence of the results. Mecke would be expected to turn olive to black with LSD. Any other color change would suggest the presence of something other than LSD.
So if after three tests we haven't had a contradictory result then it seems probable (though still far from certain) that LSD was the substance in question. One should still take care when consuming a new substance though. The test results are not 100% reliable, especially if the substance was a mixture.
Read more here
2) TLC + Reagents
Eluent: methanol:ammonia - 2.5ml of 25% ammonia and 97.5ml methanol for 100ml eluent
Merck silica f254nm plates. Run next to caffeine. Use 254nm UV to visualize
LSD should appear as a single strongly blue spot around same height as caffeine. No other LSD substitutes shines strongly blue. Run confirmatory reagent test on top of spot under normal light afterwards.
3) Black light
Careful though, because the family of chemicals including 25I-NBOMe and 25C-NBOMe are also reported to fluoresce under uv light, glowing a pink or orangish color.erowid said:LSD fluoresces (glows) blue to blue-ish white under longwave (360 nm) UV light. Obviously other things glow under blacklight as well, so just the fact that it glows doesn't mean it's LSD, but if it doesn't glow, LSD can generally be ruled out. The glow should be apparent in both crystal form and liquid form.
Whether or not this test can be used for LSD liquid that has been dropped onto other materials such as blotter or sugar cubes is more complicated. There are reports of being able to hold a blacklight close to a hit of blotter in a dark room and see a glow in the spot on the paper where the acid was dropped. However other people report that the concentration can be low enough that it doesn't appear. An additional complication is that some paper or inks themselves glow under blacklight, so a fully glowing hit of blotter (rather than a glowing spot on the hit) doesn't identify the presence of LSD.
SOURCE
To test for the quantity of LSD in a given sample as well as purity there are the following methods:
1) gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS)
SOURCE
2) HPLC + UV-vis spectroscopy
SOURCE
These tests require lab equipment most people will not have at home, so most likely you will have to send a sample to a testing lab, if available. This means that you on your own in all probability cannot determine the quantity of the LSD in a given sample.
Substances that are often "mistaken" for LSD:
DOB, DOI, DOM, DOC and other closely related drugs (DOx)
NBOMes (25I, 25B, 25C, 25D, 25I, 25IP, etc)
Bromo-DragonFLY
lysergamides such as ALD-52
5-MeO-AMT