As I'm preparing to do my very first extraction, I decided I wanted to make doubly sure of the chemicals I'll be using. I'm confident that my distilled water, salt, citric acid, and sodium hydroxide are all food-grade. I was disappointed in the results of the evap tests I did on my solvents though.
My Bestine left a thin, tenacious, waxy white film, that proved to be very heat-stable and chemical resistant (it was hard cleaning it off my watch glass). My hardware store acetone left an oily residue with a strong odor of petroleum grease, like what you'd pack wheel bearings with. Yuck.
I would surmise that the impurities came from the manufacturing and packaging equipment. The acetone likely pulled grease out of the pumps and valves, and the Bestine could very well have leached nitrile or polyacrylate (or even PTFE) out of the fittings. Regardless, I didn't want any of those contanimants anywhere near something that would be going into my body.
So, being the nerd that I am, I decided to pull out my distillation glassware set and clean them up!
Side note: one thing my distillation kit lacked was boiling stones. Actual boiling stones are expensive, but I discovered that
these aquarium filter cartridges contain a baggie's worth of nice, clean pearls of sintered glass. I cut a filter open to get the pearls out, and they make fantastic boiling stones for organic solvents. (I haven't tested them for resistance to acids or bases yet.) They're porous so they're single-use only, and 8-10 pearls was fine for a 1L round bottom flask.
Real danger alert! wrote:Warning: distilling organic solvents is extremely dangerous if done improperly! Acetone vapor will seep from tight ground glass joints and fill a space quickly. Bestine fumes are heavier than air and will travel along floors to find sparks and pilot lights dozens of feet away. Spills of boiling solvent will cause severe burns and an immediate risk of explosion and fire, at the same time. Don't attempt this unless you have lab experience and a working knowledge of safe distillation practices. And for the love of Pete, wear safety goggles!
The AcetoneI did the acetone first, heating in a water bath via a simple distillation. In hindsight, I ran this first distillation way too fast, and likely carried over a lot of impurity. It was good enough to get my glassware properly clean though, so for the second round I installed the fractionating (Vigreux) column and distilled at a much more reasonable pace.
I processed a total of 3 liters of acetone in three batches. My thermometer appears to be
very accurate, as the vapor held 56°C through the entire distillation. The resulting acetone appears to be very pure, perhaps with just a bit of absorbed water. When each batch got down to the last 100ml or so, I noticed it wasn't evaporating as clean any more. It had a bit more water, and although it exaporated clean, it produced some of that icky "grease" smell for a few minutes after the acetone was gone.
Even down to the last 30-40ml when I stopped collecting distillate, the distillation temperature remained steady. The remaining liquid in the boiling flask went into my Waste Organics can, and I added another liter of acetone and proceeded with the next batch. For the final batch, I evaporated off these dregs; it contained a lot of acetone plus maybe a ml or two of water, which eventually dried down to leave a layer of foul-smelling grease in my watch glass. The distilled acetone evaporates very, very clean!
The BestineDistilling the Bestine was a bit more interesting. I did a simple distillation here, really wish I had fractionated it but oh well. I heated this in a sand bath (actually copper-coated BBs) anticipating higher temperatures than I got; in hindsight, a water bath would have been just fine.
The first fraction of Bestine distilled over at almost exactly 69°C: the boiling point of hexane. Out of a liter of Bestine, I probably collected 50ml of presumably hexane, which went into my Waste Organics can. I started collecting with the next fraction at 79°C, which, assuming it was indeed heptane, would have been 2,2-Dimethylpentane. The temperature then rose stepwise until it reached almost exactly 92°C and stabilized.
I probably distilled over about 90% of the Bestine at that 92°C; The temperature never rose higher than that. I never did reach the 98.4°C boiling point of n-Heptane, and I stopped collecting when I got down to the last 50ml or so, still distilling at 92°C.
Now, I'm not entirely sure what I have in my bottle labeled "Distilled Bestine". 3-Methylhexane boils at 91.6°C and 3-Ethylpentane boils at 93.3°C, but the SDS for Bestine specifically lists its composition as 100% n-heptane. Perhaps I was actually dealing with some sort of azeotropic mixture of n-heptane and other light hydrocarbons? Or heck, maybe I had the thermometer positioned wrong in the distillation head. The acetone temperature was spot-on though...
Anyway, whatever it is, I'm very pleased with how clean my distilled Bestine evaporates, and I'll be comfortable extracting with this. I still have another quart of it (two, actually) so I'm debating putting another liter under the Vigreux column and see what happens.
So that's my book report! Thoughts? Has anyone else analyzed their NPS, and Bestine in particular, to this degree?