Another update: I've found the harmine! Here's what happened...
After redissolving in phosphoric acid the solids that were precipitated from the initial reaction by ammonia diffusion (described elsewhere on the forum), magnesium ammonium phosphate ('MAP'
) was precipitated in three fractions by dropwise addition of aqueous ammonia (specific gravity 910 when fresh, which it wasn't). The initial solubility test was carried out on a small sample from the 0.64 grams of dirty off-white precipitate which had started to form at pH5.5. [The typical harmala crud had had time to settle slowly on top of it while it stood overnight.] Evaporation of this solution left but the faintest oily smear on the evaporation dish. Near UV light (from a 'spy pen' toy) produced no visible fluorescence on the dish. The residue when redissolved in ethanol gave only a faint line of yellowish-green fluorescence along the light beam, indicative of the inevitable presence of harmaline contamination due to incomplete washing.
The second fraction, comprising 1.22 grams of clean, white precipitate on a par with titanium dioxide in appearance, formed between pH 5.5 and 6.0. It settled out quickly, giving an indication of its higher density. This was a large hint that it was more dense than the organic fractions could be. An ethanol solubility test help confirm this - the white solid remained undissolved as far as could be discerned and the supernatant produced no noticeable fluorescence with the spy pen except for the unavoidable harmaline traces. The powder also felt noticeably gritty in comparison with many organic substances.
The third fraction formed at around pH 6.2. The 0.16 grams of beige powder settled more slowly and was noticeably brown compared to the whiteness of the previous fraction as it formed. It became much paler on drying. The ethanol solubility test cleaned up the white powder a little and the solution gave a faint deep blue fluorescence which could be considered characteristic of the tiny amount of harmine present.
***So, yes - there's the harmine, it seems.***
There was also an insoluble fraction left over from the initial ammonia diffusion precipitation. This seems to be basic magnesium carbonate, as there was an effervescence on washing it with phosphoric acid. I'll be doing a few more tests on this material later today.
One more thing to bear in mind when working with ammonia and phosphoric acid is that ammonium phosphates will exert a
buffering effect. This, combined with my apparently lousy narrow-range pH papers, makes the pH values quoted above maybe less than reliable. The fact that the harmine apparently precipitated at pH 6.2 could be down to co-precipitation effects with MAP that will have been present as a fine suspension of crystallisation nuclei, or could be that the pH papers couldn't cope with the conditions of buffering, strongly coloured solution, and the evaporation of ammonia from the papers at PH >7 which really hampers measurement of higher pH using this method.
Good news is I'll be trying out a
self-build pH probe to test with my ancient pH meter. More on that elsewhere, when it happens.
“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