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Stirrer issues Options
 
Fractalus
#1 Posted : 4/9/2019 5:46:49 PM
a spacecat just got his new stirrer and try it on an ongoing extraction, but when stirrered only the water part is stirring and the naptha stay still, the stirring power is on 7 of 9, when the cat upper the scale from 7 the magnet run away and he trys few other magnet but only this one(a bit small) is working
though the minds may be different, the body forms may be different
it is through the heart that we recognize our spirits are one.

everything im writing is a complete fiction and it is only a reflection of my imagination.
 
Brennendes Wasser
Chemical expert
#2 Posted : 4/9/2019 6:12:36 PM
Well ... I'm sure you are doing something like this:

The aq basic soup is placed in your dish and the naphtha on top so you are at the final extraction step.


I also have this "issue", but IMO NO WORRIES!


The thing is:

Naphtha can hold an insanely higher amount of Spice than you will get by performing your extraction.

Normally you would want to minimize concentration gradients in the aqueous phase and the organic phase. Having an even concentration profile in your aqueous phase would grant that you would have always a high amount of space towards the phase border between both and a higher transition of spice towards the Naphtha.

If you would NOT stirr at all, the concentration would somehow be a little higher on the bottom of your AQ and lower at the border of both phases.

So as you stirr and the WATER phase is moved, there should not be any concentration gradient inside your AQ phase.



But what for the organic phase: It MAY have a severe concentration gradient from the phase border to the top (sorry, I dont really know the english correct terms). Normally you would think that this would decrease the uptake of Spice into the Naphtha more than neccessary.

But as I told in the 1st few sentences the maximum capacity of Spice inside the Naphtha is way higher than you will ever achieve while doing the extraction it is not a problem at all. You will always be at the lower end of the saturation level and therefore the uptake will NOT be really lowered if you dont also stirr the organic layer, too.




So now maybe your initial concern was that you really want BOTH phases to mix completely, making them totally homogenous and then let them separate afterwards. Yes then it seems that you would need more stirring which is impossible.

But I highly recommend not to do it. The way you actually do it exactly the best IMO. Just stirr so hard, that both phases dont mix and the watery phase keeps separated, but always totally stirred.

Now all you have to do is wait longer, but even then its a benefit, as no emulsion is formed, which would take again like 20 minutes to separate fully.



My advice:

stirr it so hard that the phases just DONT mix (ok, it seems like you could not even get to this level, even if you wanted to) and stirr like 30 minutes.

Then you can easily decant the Naphtha which can be reduced and freeze-preciped directly, you wont need ANY additional workup, if you did not create any emulsions while stirring.

And place another portion of Naphtha on it and repeat.

Now one may think that NOT mixing the both layers together and let them separate from each other again is not that efficient. But with this method I only need 2 pulls to get 95 % of the soup, waiting 30 minutes or maybe even 45 for each pull.


So sorry for long post - but dont worry, your device is very good to go !!!
 
Pihuechenyi
#3 Posted : 4/9/2019 9:23:08 PM
Yes, that is also my experience. At first I thought I had wasted my cash on a stirrer as the naptha seemed to stay as a thick layer at the top and wasn't mixing. Usually if i'm extracting in a bottle i'll shake like hell (maybe avoiding emulsions with a high ph, i'm not sure of the science but emulsions aren't too much of a problem for me). However I was gobsmacked when I precipitated the spice from the solvent mixed with the stirrer, it was lovely to see so much DMT!
 
Brennendes Wasser
Chemical expert
#4 Posted : 4/10/2019 10:00:05 AM
I should also have mentioned that you should heat it. As your stirrer has no heat function, heat your SOUP (heating only the naphtha is worthless, it cools down nearly to RT when placed on RT water) to 40 - 60 °C.

Then throw your naphtha on top of it and stirr gently and just wait 30 minutes or maybe even 60. You dont have to do anything in this time, so why not just waiting? Even when waiting 5 hours the Spice out of it is still pretty clean.

If you stirr with your stirrer you should do between 40 - 50 °C. If you dont stirr at all and just let it sit you should do 60 °C. 60 °C is the lower end, where Naphtha starts to boil so higher than this would delete it over time. In any case put a cover on that jar so that you minimize evaporation even at 40 °C.
The reason to not heat up to 60 °C when stirring is that upon higher temperatures the water phase is more likely to spill into the not moving naphtha phase on top. And as I told before this is what we want to prevent. 40 °C or even 50 °C should be ok ...

When not moving the AQ phase, then 60 °C is still ok. And as the water moves itself more and more when being hotter, at 60 °C it is not that bad if you do not even stirr it on your own, but as you have the stirrer, use it =)

Just keep sure to maybe heat it up again after 10 minutes or 20, as it gets colder and colder over time if the stirrer cannot heat.

Naphtha will dramatically loose its maximum uptake capacity of Spice when cooled down, still to a usable amount, but the higher the better, as then the transition of Spice at the phase border is waaaaaaayyy faster / more effective.

Best regards
 
 
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