Quote:I don't know how many times to pull, how much solvent to use etc., then how many times to wash / salt the goodies out or otherwise get them out of the solvent. I don't know when to stop and whether I'm discarding any goodies.
You can throw a little bit of science to answer all these questions.
For example, you can determine a partitioning coefficient for various solvents, temperatures, and salt concentrations. From this, you can calculate the near optimal amount of solvent and the number of pulls.
You can also simulate the extraction using already extracted DMT, just get an idea of how much is extracted.
Usually I take it more as an art than science and fiddle with parameters, observing results and ten go by my feeling. I believe most people do it like that.
I have these book, one of which (I don't remember at the moment) has a chapter of liquid-liquid extraction, discussing solvent selection, partitioning coefficients, calculating matter transfer, salting out and more:
https://www.amazon.com/A...y-Leonard/dp/1138494143/https://www.amazon.com/E...a-Cranwell/dp/1119952387But you can definitely find more about that, these are basic principles taught in chemistry, physical chemistry, organic chemistry, chemical engineering and such. There is a huge interest in optimizing these processes in industry so there are methods on how to do that.
I would search and learn more about liquid-liquid extraction, salting out, fractional crystallization and more.
When I started reading chemistry books, I found 90% of guesswork can be eliminated, I just have to beat myself up to learn more.