downwardsfromzero wrote:If yields are better without zinc, it's even possible that zinc reduction stabilizes the polymer!
Is there anyone out there who can do something like solid-state NMR on a sample of goo? What other analytical technique would be most informative about the bonding state in the DMT goo?
Apparently indole aggregates can change luminescence. The more aggregation, the longer the wavelength (at least in the attached example, which I'm not sure would apply to DMT).
So when converting orange goo (aggregated DMT candidate) to crystals (less aggregated DMT candidate) using acid water
(example), monitoring progress with a UV light may be interesting: orange goo may be red/green under UV right after dissolving in acid, and change towards blue or UV transparent while being "de-polymerized" by the acid over time.
For testing purposes, I think one can get the orange goo back from xtals using a concentrated basing step with high ionic strength + time. Heated naphtha seems to be needed to pick up the polymerized DMT which will crash as orange oil before xtals when cooling.