Parshvik Chintan wrote:Failing a spoon fed answer, is there a resource one could point me to that might alleviate me of my stupidity?
Are you fishing for insults, perhaps?
I wouldn't say DMT acetate is especially 'unstable' in the chemical sense but it will be hygroscopic and tends to liquefy. Add to that its tendency towards dissociation back into the freebase and we can then see what this is about. There is an equilibrium between DMT acetate, and the freebase plus acetic acid. This equilibrium depends on the relative basicities of DMT freebase and the acetate anion.
Thinking about it a bit more, we have the volatility of acetic acid which means that at least some of it will be slowly evaporating away. The upshot here is we get a slowly increasing amount freebase DMT forming in a finely divided (molecular, even) form in close proximity to moisture. This seems to be a recipe for oxidation of the DMT base - not to the N-oxide as previously imagined but by electron loss from the pyrrole (nitrogen-containing) ring and subsequent oligomerisation/polymerisation.
This, in a way, answers the question about heating DMT acetate - increasing the temperature increases the rate of evaporation of acetic acid, the rate at which further DMT acetate dissociates, and perhaps the rate of DMT oxidation too. And DMT freebase itself starts to evaporate at some point. It could be that the 39°C value was reckoned to optimise the dissociation rate, and I would note that it is just below the melting point of the most easily fusible of the DMT polymorphs.
If it's a stable, solid form of DMT you are looking for, you might want to consider the fumarate or the citrate. And recent work - hot off the press, practically - suggests that the lactate could be the key to 'vaporhuasca' if you've ever considered experimenting with e-liquids. Fumaric, citric and lactic acids are all available as food grade materials.
Are you really saying that you would get anaphylactic shock, dermatitis, or maybe asthma, from simple exposure to naphtha, by the way?
“There is a way of manipulating matter and energy so as to produce what modern scientists call 'a field of force'. The field acts on the observer and puts him in a privileged position vis-à-vis the universe. From this position he has access to the realities which are ordinarily hidden from us by time and space, matter and energy. This is what we call the Great Work."
― Jacques Bergier, quoting Fulcanelli