Difference between revisions of "CIELO"

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[[CIELO]]
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{{ShowInfo|[[Image:Note_error.png]]|'''Note:'''|This page is a workplace for an experimental process. It is intended to summarize information from ongoing discussions in the forum. Feel free to update this page with any observations or comments. Wiki changes are reversible so you can't break anything - be bold. This page is not currently linked to the main wiki and will remain as such until the process is independently verified by others.}}
 
{{ShowInfo|[[Image:Note_error.png]]|'''Note:'''|This page is a workplace for an experimental process. It is intended to summarize information from ongoing discussions in the forum. Feel free to update this page with any observations or comments. Wiki changes are reversible so you can't break anything - be bold. This page is not currently linked to the main wiki and will remain as such until the process is independently verified by others.}}
  
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In this TEK, aqueous lime cactus paste is broken down by microwave radiation, saturated with NaCl, and extracted with ethyl acetate. The extract is chemically dried and salted with citric acid to precipitate mescaline citrate crystals.
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In this TEK, aqueous cactus paste is broken down with microwave radiation, basified with lime, made clumpy with CaCl2, and extracted with ethyl acetate. The extract is salted with citric acid to precipitate mescaline citrate crystals directly in the solvent.
 
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Processing the paste in the microwave to make it ready for extraction is the most laborious part of this TEK. There is also a MgSO4 chemichal dry that may need some user practice to perform cleanly.
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== Materials ==
 
== Materials ==
  
* Quart jars with lids*
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* Quart jars with LDPE or PP plastic lids (e.g. below)
 
* Food scale
 
* Food scale
* 25g + 25g lime (Ca(OH)2)
 
 
* 300g water
 
* 300g water
 
* 100g powdered dry cacti
 
* 100g powdered dry cacti
 
* Microwave
 
* Microwave
* 80g plain table salt (NaCl)
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* 25g Ca(OH)2 (lime)
* ~ 1000g Ethyl acetate (sometimes labeled "MEK substitute")
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* 25g anhydrous CaCl2
* 16g anhydrous MgSO4
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* ~ 1000g ethyl acetate ("MEK substitute")
* pH paper (optional)
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* pH paper
* Shallow glass baking dish with lid*
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* Citric acid
 
* Citric acid
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* Filter (optional)
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* Shallow baking dish
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* Scraping tool (e.g. razor blade)
  
 
''*If lids are plastic, use ethyl acetate resistant LDPE or PP.''
 
  
 
[[File:Plastics.png|center]]
 
[[File:Plastics.png|center]]
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Do not microwave a sealed container. There must be a ventilation path for water vapor to avoid pressure buildup and a cracked jar or explosion.
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Each adult individual needs to find and review any other relevant safety information throughly and make their own personal decision on proceeding.
 
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Microwaving lime cacti paste produces smelly fumes that will be noticed by the people in your surroundings. Lime is a skin irritant and hot lime will be more severe, avoid skin contact.
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These are only good-faith suggestions. They do not guarantee safety. Each adult individual needs to review external information throughly and make their personal decision on proceeding.
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== Process ==
 
== Process ==
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=== Paste ===  
 
=== Paste ===  
  
Add first 25g of lime to water followed by cactus powder while stirring to form a homogeneous paste. Stir long enough give time for the lime to react and make a smooth texture.
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Mix water and cactus powder in a a quart jar. Microwave in short bursts, monitoring closely to interrup the irradiation to stop the paste from swelling over the jar. Stir frequently and keep track of evaporation with a food scale. Paste color will change from green to tan. Once ~50g of water evaporate microwaving is complete.
 
+
 
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Microwave between 300W and 500W in bursts of 5 minutes or less monitoring closely (paste will boil up and can escape the jar if not stopped). Loosely cover with a plastic lid initially to partially trap steam until paste liquefies. Continue microwaving without a lid until a total of 100g of water evaporate to make the paste stiff again (total microwave time is ~40 minutes).
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Mix in NaCl (the paste will become runny). Finally, mix in second 25g of lime to stiffen up the paste one final time.
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{{ShowInfo|[[Image:Note_error.png]]|'''Note:'''|Could using CaCl2 instead of NaCl be better?? OTC as a de-icer, the anhydrous form would absorb water reducing microwave time after the paste is broken down to a liquid. Also, the LLE for water/ethyl acetate/CaCl2 could be cleaner than water/ehtyl acetate/NaCl (less water in the solvent and less solvent in the water), but have only found published data for water/ehtyl acetate/NaCl has been found.}}
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The ideal final paste is stiff but not hard to stir. If needed, adjust consistency by adding a little water (runnier) or lime (stiffer).
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Mix in lime until homogeneous and then mix in CaCl2 until paste breaks evenly up into small spongy clumps.
  
 
=== Pull ===  
 
=== Pull ===  
  
Add ~ 300g of ethyl acetate to the paste making the jar ~3/4 full. Stir slowly and thoroughly. Cover with lid and let it sit for a few hours or more**.
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Add ~ 200g of ethyl acetate to the paste making the jar ~3/4 full and seal with proper lid. Extract for a few hours regularly shaking for several minutes. Allow to rest overnight and decant extract to a second jar.  
  
  
Decant solvent into a second jar. About ~100g of solvent will remain in the paste.  
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Pull three more times. Progress can be monitored with pH paper (green color indicates free base presence). Paste will change during the pulls. If solvent becomes trapped in a gunky paste, adding CaCl2 should free it up.
  
  
Pull three more times with ~200g of ethyl acetate, making the jar ~3/4 full again. Unlike the first pull, all the added solvent can be recovered. The paste may become sandy in later pulls.
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Combined pulls will give ~a quart of clear yellow extract. Optionally, more pulls can be done into a different jar for a modest yield improvement.
  
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=== Salt ===
  
Combined pulls will give about ~800g (~a quart) of clear yellow extract. Optionally, more pulls can be done later for a modest yield improvement.
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Dissolve ~250mg (~1/16 tsp) of citric acid into the extract making it cloudy. Test with pH paper. Salting is complete when pH paper is acidic. If needed, add more citric acid in small increments of ~100mg.
  
  
''**If solvent separation is poor the starting paste was too wet. Adding lime releases cloudy solvent that clears up over time. Conversely, if paste in hard to mix with the solvent, the paste was too dry (simply add water).''
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Place extract in fridge to fully crash mescaline citrate crystals over 12-72 hours. Precipitation is complete when salted extract goes from cloudy to clear.
  
=== Dry ===
 
  
Dry extract with anhydrous MgSO4 (~2g per 100g of extract) by swirling and settling<ref>Solvent drying tips[https://orgchemboulder.com/Technique/Procedures/Drying/Drying.shtml]</ref>. Decant clear solution to shallow glass baking dish.
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If crystals do not form after a few days there was an issue with the TEK. A freezer precipitation can be tried. If that doesn't work either, it should still be possible to recover any product in the solvent with water pulls followed by evaporation and ethyl acetate washes.
  
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=== Finish ===
  
If settling time is very long or decanting is difficult, using more coarse MgSO4 and/or filtering with a fine filter may be helpful.
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Decant ethyl acetate into a storage jar for reuse, optionally using a filter if any loose crystals pour out. Rinse crysals with fresh ethyl acetate at least once. Optionally, continue rinsing until yellow color is removed to personal cosmetic satisfaction. Leave xtals uncovered to evaporate all residual solvent. Dissolve crystals in minimal warm water and passively evaporate undisturbed in a shallow baking dish to obtain long crystal needles and scrape them up.
  
  
{{ShowInfo|[[Image:Note_error.png]]|'''Note:'''|Could using CaCl2 be better/easier? Have also tested Na2CO3 and Na2SO4, so far MgSO4 gives the fastest xtalization in the next step. An extra dry could be tried with K2CO3 also. A good chemichal drying does help with xtalization. However, without drying xtalization can be done in the freezer - perhaps we can simply do that and skip this?}}
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Mass spectrometry results indicate the product is very clean mescaline. See image below, peaks near 210 and 194 are from mescaline (second peak is from mescaline's  amine cleavage during measurement).
  
=== Salt ===
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[[File: Cactus-extract.jpg]]
  
Gently drop ~250mg (~1/16 tsp) of citric acid into the extract without stirring***. Clouds form as the citric acid diffuses into solution reacting with free base mescaline. After a few hours at room temperature the clouds settle as beautiful mescaline citrate xtals. If xtals have difficulty forming, move dish to freezer to try to recover the product (this indicates an issue with the process such as incomplete microwave breakdown or chemichal drying). If xtals do not form, there is an issue with the process/materials, but it should still be possible to recover any product in the solvent with water pulls as is done in other TEKs (to finish this more laborious path, evaporate and wash resulting residue with anhydrous ethyl acetate).
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== Lab Notes ==
  
  
Every 10mg of citric acid ('''CitH<sub>3</sub>''') reacts with enough free base mescaline ('''Mes''') to precipitate up to 43mg of mescaline citrate:
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The microwave radiation breaks down the plant matter. CaCl2 improves the paste texture and helps keep some water out of the extract. CaCl2 can lower the pH by making Ca(OH)2 less soluble. A test 250g water solution with 25 of Ca(OH)2 and 25g of CaCl2 had a pH of 11.1, above mescaline's pKa of 9.6. Overall, the resulting plant paste seems to give give efficient and clean pulls ready to to crash the mescaline salt. Different paste process order, skipping the microwave, using NaCl instead of CaCl2, or using acetone instead of ethyl acetate, could work too, but may have lower yields, produce a less workable paste, or carry unwanted plant matter that interferes with crystalization or ends up in the product.
  
  
'''<span style="color: Orange"> <div style="text-align: center;">3Mes<sub>(↑)</sub> + CitH<sub>3()</sub> ⇒ 3(MesH)Cit<sub>(↓)</sub></div></span>'''
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Allowing 8 hours rest before decanting gives the pull enough time for ethyl acetate, water, and cactus/Ca(OH)2/CaCl2 time to settle and reach liquid-liquid equilibrium.
  
  
Salting is complete if no clouds form after adding more citric acid (e.g. ~ 50mg), or optionally if pH paper is neutral/acidic. A few hundred mg of citric acid should be more than enough for the typical cactus (0.5% to 0.8% yield). The legendary Ogun would need 1000mg of citric acid for 4.3% yield.
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It is possible to chemically dry the extract with a drying agent such as anhydrous MgSO4. However, no clear yield benefit was observed by performing this step. Surprisingly, solutions carefully dried with anhydrous CaCl2 followed by K2CO3 had difficulty crystalizing after salting, indicating that a some water is desirable for crystalization. Experimentally, the water content in ethyl acetate from this TEK is in a good range.  
  
 +
During salting, every 10mg of citric acid ('''CitH3''') reacts with enough free base mescaline ('''Mes''') to precipitate up to 43mg of mescaline citrate:
  
Over acidifying is not a big concern. There is room for a lot of excess citric acid in solution since several grams can dissolve in a quart of ethyl acetate.
 
  
 +
'''<span style="color: Orange"> <div style="text-align: center;">3Mes<sub>(↑)</sub> + CitH3<sub>(↑)</sub> ⇒ 3(MesH)Cit<sub>(↓)</sub></div></span>'''
  
''<nowiki />***Stirring won't cause any major issues but xtals will be smaller.''
 
  
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250mg of citric acid are enough for the typical cactus (up to 1% yield). However, and outlier like the legendary Ogun would need ~1100mg of citric acid for a 4.7% yield.
  
{{ShowInfo|[[Image:Note_error.png]]|'''Note:'''|The microwave break down of plant matter and a good chemmical dry both seem to help get good quality xtalization at room temp. However, even when those steps are not done (or not done well), xtalization can be forced in the freezer (usually). Perhaps this could even enable skipping the microwave step and/or the drying step someday - especially if CaCl2 gives a drier solution while pulling (compared to NaCl).}}
 
  
 +
Over acidifying is not a big concern. There is room for a lot of excess citric acid in solution since several grams can dissolve in a quart of ethyl acetate even when chilled.
  
  
{{ShowInfo|[[Image:Note_error.png]]|'''Note:'''|Other organic acids could work. Perhaps an anhydrous one could be better (citric acid is monohydrate)? Tested fumaric and got wispy xtals (not ideal). Malic would be interesting (natural mescaline salt form?). There are many other solid organic acids soluble in ethyl acetate.}}
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Other solid organic acids could work. Fumaric acid was tested and gave wispy tiny crystals (not ideal). Malic would be interesting since that could yield the (reportedly?) natural mescaline salt form. There are many other solid organic acids soluble in ethyl acetate that can be tested (tartaric, ascorbic, succinic, etc).
 
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=== Finish ===
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Pour off ethyl acetate into a storage container**** using a coffee filter to help pick up any loose xtals. Optionally, rinse xtals with anhydrous ethyl acetate until yellow color is removed to personal cosmetic satisfaction. Leave xtals uncovered to evaporate all residual solvent, this is the final product.
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Mass spectrometry results indicate the product is very clean mescaline (see image below for a sample after only two rinses that was not completely white yet). Yields are highly dependent on starting cacti powder and can vary from 0.1% to 5% (0.5% to 1% being common).
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[[File: Cactus-extract.jpg]]
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''<nowiki />****Solvent can be washed with brine and reused.''
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It is possible that some of the assumptions and conclusions in these lab notes are incorrect or incomplete. The process was simply tuned for good yields, but the search was not exhaustive. There could be ways to improve this process.
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Revision as of 17:12, 8 March 2021

CIELO


Note error.png Note: This page is a workplace for an experimental process. It is intended to summarize information from ongoing discussions in the forum. Feel free to update this page with any observations or comments. Wiki changes are reversible so you can't break anything - be bold. This page is not currently linked to the main wiki and will remain as such until the process is independently verified by others.

Introduction

CIELO stands for Crystals In Ethyl-acetate Leisurely OTC (Over The Counter).


In this TEK, aqueous cactus paste is broken down with microwave radiation, basified with lime, made clumpy with CaCl2, and extracted with ethyl acetate. The extract is salted with citric acid to precipitate mescaline citrate crystals directly in the solvent.

Materials

  • Quart jars with LDPE or PP plastic lids (e.g. below)
  • Food scale
  • 300g water
  • 100g powdered dry cacti
  • Microwave
  • 25g Ca(OH)2 (lime)
  • 25g anhydrous CaCl2
  • ~ 1000g ethyl acetate ("MEK substitute")
  • pH paper
  • Citric acid
  • Filter (optional)
  • Shallow baking dish
  • Scraping tool (e.g. razor blade)


Plastics.png

Safety

Review ethyl acetate's safety information[1] and check the manufacture's MSDS to verify you have pure ethyl acetate.


Each adult individual needs to find and review any other relevant safety information throughly and make their own personal decision on proceeding.

Process

Paste

Mix water and cactus powder in a a quart jar. Microwave in short bursts, monitoring closely to interrup the irradiation to stop the paste from swelling over the jar. Stir frequently and keep track of evaporation with a food scale. Paste color will change from green to tan. Once ~50g of water evaporate microwaving is complete.


Mix in lime until homogeneous and then mix in CaCl2 until paste breaks evenly up into small spongy clumps.

Pull

Add ~ 200g of ethyl acetate to the paste making the jar ~3/4 full and seal with proper lid. Extract for a few hours regularly shaking for several minutes. Allow to rest overnight and decant extract to a second jar.


Pull three more times. Progress can be monitored with pH paper (green color indicates free base presence). Paste will change during the pulls. If solvent becomes trapped in a gunky paste, adding CaCl2 should free it up.


Combined pulls will give ~a quart of clear yellow extract. Optionally, more pulls can be done into a different jar for a modest yield improvement.

Salt

Dissolve ~250mg (~1/16 tsp) of citric acid into the extract making it cloudy. Test with pH paper. Salting is complete when pH paper is acidic. If needed, add more citric acid in small increments of ~100mg.


Place extract in fridge to fully crash mescaline citrate crystals over 12-72 hours. Precipitation is complete when salted extract goes from cloudy to clear.


If crystals do not form after a few days there was an issue with the TEK. A freezer precipitation can be tried. If that doesn't work either, it should still be possible to recover any product in the solvent with water pulls followed by evaporation and ethyl acetate washes.

Finish

Decant ethyl acetate into a storage jar for reuse, optionally using a filter if any loose crystals pour out. Rinse crysals with fresh ethyl acetate at least once. Optionally, continue rinsing until yellow color is removed to personal cosmetic satisfaction. Leave xtals uncovered to evaporate all residual solvent. Dissolve crystals in minimal warm water and passively evaporate undisturbed in a shallow baking dish to obtain long crystal needles and scrape them up.


Mass spectrometry results indicate the product is very clean mescaline. See image below, peaks near 210 and 194 are from mescaline (second peak is from mescaline's amine cleavage during measurement).

Cactus-extract.jpg

Lab Notes

The microwave radiation breaks down the plant matter. CaCl2 improves the paste texture and helps keep some water out of the extract. CaCl2 can lower the pH by making Ca(OH)2 less soluble. A test 250g water solution with 25 of Ca(OH)2 and 25g of CaCl2 had a pH of 11.1, above mescaline's pKa of 9.6. Overall, the resulting plant paste seems to give give efficient and clean pulls ready to to crash the mescaline salt. Different paste process order, skipping the microwave, using NaCl instead of CaCl2, or using acetone instead of ethyl acetate, could work too, but may have lower yields, produce a less workable paste, or carry unwanted plant matter that interferes with crystalization or ends up in the product.


Allowing 8 hours rest before decanting gives the pull enough time for ethyl acetate, water, and cactus/Ca(OH)2/CaCl2 time to settle and reach liquid-liquid equilibrium.


It is possible to chemically dry the extract with a drying agent such as anhydrous MgSO4. However, no clear yield benefit was observed by performing this step. Surprisingly, solutions carefully dried with anhydrous CaCl2 followed by K2CO3 had difficulty crystalizing after salting, indicating that a some water is desirable for crystalization. Experimentally, the water content in ethyl acetate from this TEK is in a good range.

During salting, every 10mg of citric acid (CitH3) reacts with enough free base mescaline (Mes) to precipitate up to 43mg of mescaline citrate:


3Mes(↑) + CitH3(↑) ⇒ 3(MesH)Cit(↓)


250mg of citric acid are enough for the typical cactus (up to 1% yield). However, and outlier like the legendary Ogun would need ~1100mg of citric acid for a 4.7% yield.


Over acidifying is not a big concern. There is room for a lot of excess citric acid in solution since several grams can dissolve in a quart of ethyl acetate even when chilled.


Other solid organic acids could work. Fumaric acid was tested and gave wispy tiny crystals (not ideal). Malic would be interesting since that could yield the (reportedly?) natural mescaline salt form. There are many other solid organic acids soluble in ethyl acetate that can be tested (tartaric, ascorbic, succinic, etc).


It is possible that some of the assumptions and conclusions in these lab notes are incorrect or incomplete. The process was simply tuned for good yields, but the search was not exhaustive. There could be ways to improve this process.

References

  1. Ethyl acetate safety[1]