highRvibratoryfreq wrote:do you agree that my digital ph pen could be giving innnacurate readings due to the emulsions throwing it off?
Could be; how did you calibrate your pH meter? All instruments of measurement need calibration (even the common ruler needs calibration). Also, even presence of solvents like xylene can interfere with pH measurements.
highRvibratoryfreq wrote:...and adding more ph3 solution to bring the ph down to 6-7.
highRvibratoryfreq wrote:when i was shaking the ph just didnt come down i'd recheck atleast 10 or 20 times and i kept adding more acid water (too much i think) , i tried just rolling instead of shaking a pull last night and i ended up using a lot less acid solution to get it to 6-7
You might need to use better terminology here; if you have a solution of pH=3, bringing it
down means bringing it towards 2, 1, 0, -1 etc. Bringing it
up means 4, 5, 6, 7, etc. When you salt alkaloids with acidic water you'd expect the pH to go slightly up due to the acid being neutralised by the alkaloids.
highRvibratoryfreq wrote:also i find if i seperate the salting water around ph 8-9 then add fresh ph3 solution it levels off at 6-7 without me have to keep repeat shaking which is the cause of the bad emulsions, which take a long time to clear with funnels and cotton.
This sentence really makes no sense !
I think that you just need to stop thinking too much about pH measurements, just salt things out and evaporate them; when you salt things out and nothing comes upon evaporation, then that's you, you salted everything.
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