Poekus wrote:Ok, thanks for your reply. I learnt a new word as well. This means it shouldn't affect d'limonene's PH as the protons aren't exchanged.
D-limonene's pH cannot be changed because d-limonene does not have a pH. pH is a characteristic of water only (and may or may not be modified by a number of ways, most commonly by the nature of solutes in it).
Poekus wrote:It could however be a problem for people with cloudy limonene. When they add salted water and mix this, the particles will settle in the salted water (lowest layer) and thus there is a high possibility that you pull the excessive CaOH with the alkaloids.
I tried filtering through multiple coffee filters several times without result. Now standing on my washing machine the particles slowly settle (probably this will take a couple of hours)
This could explain why sometimes people have inactive residues. I saw some pictures of people having that clouded limonene as where it supposed to be clear (with yellow golden tint after soaking).
Assumed that it is possible, could ingesting like 400mg of CaOH be hazardous?
You won't pull Ca(OH)2 from the cloudy limonene as is; if you pull with vinegar, you'll convert calcium hydroxide to its salt, calcium acetate. And if you pull with, say hydrochloric acid, you'll get calcium chloride. Calcium hydroxide is, like alkaloids, a base and reacts with acids to form salts.
Both calcium chloride and calcium acetete are fairly safe to ingest, even in hundreds of mgs doses.
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