We've Moved! Visit our NEW FORUM to join the latest discussions. This is an archive of our previous conversations...

You can find the login page for the old forum here.
CHATPRIVACYDONATELOGINREGISTER
DMT-Nexus
FAQWIKIHEALTH & SAFETYARTATTITUDEACTIVE TOPICS
Zinc, But is There Anything Else? Options
 
adorno
#1 Posted : 5/12/2012 1:06:52 PM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 104
Joined: 28-May-2010
Last visit: 14-May-2023
Location: Earth
Just wondering, and I hope this doesn't constitute synth talk, we have already a very simple, kitchen friendly, noxious chemical avoiding tek for the zinc reduction N-Oxide to Freebase. I was just wondering, might there be any other conversion teks as simple as this? Even if only hypothetical ones? It's just that once again, I'm finding myself mystified that between all the vitamins, proteins, essential oils, cleaners, and hardware store supplies we have available (never mind the unwatched / relatively safe other things one can find online), the zinc reduction tek is the only safe/kitchen friendly conversion tek any of us have discovered.

By the way, does anyone know whatever happened to 69Ron? I see his last post was around the time I joined... It seems that not only was his zinc reduction spot on, but his LSH conversion theory has been confirmed as well (so long as it's relatively pure acetylehyde involved, 24 hours are allowed, things are kept freezing cold and in the dark, it takes place in a suspension of EtOH, and then is ingested immediately).

I'm sorry if I've done a few posts along these lines lately, I just think it might be cool if we had a few more conversion teks that were Nexus appropriate/approved.
 

Explore our global analysis service for precise testing of your extracts and other substances.
 
Ginkgo
#2 Posted : 5/12/2012 1:34:56 PM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 1926
Joined: 10-May-2009
Last visit: 27-Apr-2015
Location: β˜‚
What about ascorbic acid or vitamin C? Just a thought... Pleased
 
benzyme
#3 Posted : 5/12/2012 3:57:55 PM

analytical chemist

Moderator | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertExtreme Chemical expert | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertChemical expert | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertSenior Member | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expert

Posts: 7463
Joined: 21-May-2008
Last visit: 03-Mar-2024
Location: the lab
ascorbic won't reduce it the way a metal catalyst would, but it will donate protons and form an ascorbate salt. then if you want the free base, you'd have to basify it again, which would be counterintuitive to adding the ascorbic acid in the first place.

I'm not convinced zinc reduces the oxide. aluminum amalgum or lithium metal would do it
"Nothing is true, everything is permitted." ~ hassan i sabbah
"Experiments are the only means of attaining knowledge at our disposal. The rest is poetry, imagination." -Max Planck
 
Dreamwalker
#4 Posted : 5/12/2012 8:32:29 PM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 473
Joined: 18-Dec-2010
Last visit: 02-Jan-2021
Location: Beyond the threshold
I think this is something that should be looked at further. Perhaps someone capable of doing so should run a few experiments to back up claims of Zinc's reduction of oxide.

It is in the Nexus Wiki (at least last time I checked) that zinc will easily convert DMT N-Oxide back into N-N-DMT.

If there is a better way I think analytical tests should be done and the Wiki revised if need be.

After all that's what the Nexus is all about right?
Learning,sharing and expanding?

 
The Day Tripper
#5 Posted : 5/12/2012 11:54:20 PM

Rennasauce Man


Posts: 853
Joined: 27-May-2011
Last visit: 25-Feb-2019
Location: A Pale Blue Dot orbiting a GV2 Yellow Dwarf fusion powered Luminous Ball of Plasma at 30km/s
I don't think theres any reason to doubt zinc works as a method to reduce oxides of tryptamines to their parent compounds. I mean trout discusses it and says it works, so i tend to agree, based on the evidence he provided, and the reports from people going off that to try it themselves. AFAIK, its totally viable. I plan on trying it myself soon, with elemental zinc powder and hcl on some oxidized dmt that is insoluble in hot heptane.

Anyway, heres the pdf of trouts notes on desmodium, where he discusses the zinc reduction of dmt oxides.

"let those who have talked to the elves, find each other and band together" -TMK

In a society in which nearly everybody is dominated by somebody else's mind or by a disembodied mind, it becomes increasingly difficult to learn the truth about the activities of governments and corporations, about the quality or value of products, or about the health of one's own place and economy.
In such a society, also, our private economies will depend less upon the private ownership of real, usable property, and more upon property that is institutional and abstract, beyond individual control, such as money, insurance policies, certificates of deposit, stocks, etc. And as our private economies become more abstract, the mutual, free helps and pleasures of family and community life will be supplanted by a kind of displaced citizenship and by commerce with impersonal and self-interested suppliers...
The great enemy of freedom is the alignment of political power with wealth. This alignment destroys the commonwealth - that is, the natural wealth of localities and the local economies of household, neighborhood, and community - and so destroys democracy, of which the commonwealth is the foundation and practical means.” - Wendell Berry
 
endlessness
#6 Posted : 5/12/2012 11:58:47 PM

DMT-Nexus member

Moderator

Posts: 14191
Joined: 19-Feb-2008
Last visit: 15-Nov-2024
Location: Jungle
Yes n-oxides reduction with zinc has been described in literature before since long. Zinc is strong enough to reduce harmaline to THH too, as my own tests showed.

but the thing to wonder is if oxidized dmt people think they have is actually dmt n-oxide, or maybe something else?
 
Dr_Sister
#7 Posted : 5/17/2012 1:44:54 AM

Synaptic cleft explorer

Chemical expert | Skills: Chemistry, Horticulture, Yoga, Meditation, Graphic/web design, MarketingSenior Member | Skills: Chemistry, Horticulture, Yoga, Meditation, Graphic/web design, Marketing

Posts: 299
Joined: 10-Dec-2010
Last visit: 13-Feb-2014
Location: good question
If what you have IS in fact the oxide, then it is possible that sodium dithionite might do the job. However it is also possible that it might overdo the job and result in the hydrolysis of your amine too. It is inexpensive, OTC and not hazardous to handle so might be worth a try. It is available as the brand name RIT fabric whitener, sold in the same rack as fabric dyes at the supermarket or fabric shop.

Another milder reducer would be stannous chloride but it might be more difficult to get a hold of. If you think you might like to try either, let Sister know and she will see if she can find/write a procedure for you.
 
tryptographer
#8 Posted : 5/17/2012 5:43:44 PM

tryptamine photographer


Posts: 760
Joined: 01-Jul-2008
Last visit: 21-Aug-2023
If the actual reducing agent is nascent hydrogen (hydrogen before H2 molecules are formed) resulting from the zinc / acid reaction, there should be many alternatives. Iron filings, magnesium, aluminium... the latter two are more powerful reduction agents than zinc anyway.

But the n-oxide (if that's the brown goo that DMT turns into with aging) is just as active, some even prefer it!
 
adorno
#9 Posted : 5/22/2012 5:43:52 AM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 104
Joined: 28-May-2010
Last visit: 14-May-2023
Location: Earth
So many replies, you guys are the best! But I think you all misunderstood me... I was marveling at how simple and amazing the zinc redox (is that right, redox?) is... It works so well... SWIM was telling me SWIM tried it on an STB pull and that all the yellow oils vanished.

So... What I was asking here, is whether it is conceivable that we could have a tek as equally simple for doing other things than ridding us of N-oxides? For example, simple substitutions or something? Adding an acetyl group? A hydroxy group? A methoxy group? Brominizing it... Etc. Etc. The 69Ron zinc reduction is an amazing and simple way of converting DMT-N-Oxide to DMT, might there be similarly easy ways of converting DMT to one of it's allies?

For example, the Udenfriend System, which maybe Benzyme could tell us more about, would seem to suggest we could hydoxylate DMT (yielding both Psilocin and Bufotenin) by simply mixing it up in a buffer with ferrous iron, EDTA, and Vitamin C (all safe, OTC, dietary supplements).
 
InMotion
#10 Posted : 6/1/2012 7:58:34 PM
DMT-Nexus member

Senior Member | Skills: 3D programming, Mathematician (if you need help with algebra to differential equations I'm available), SKilled Engineer

Posts: 473
Joined: 07-Aug-2011
Last visit: 10-Jan-2014
I'd be afraid to use aluminum amalgum or any amalgum in particular on a tryptamine.

Aside from dithionate, there's also sodium cyanoborohydride which I have seen used in similar oxygen ripping reactions. Though that's a pretty elusive reagent. There are other metals that can be used such as iron and aluminum. My best friend electrolysis might not be the best bet due to side-products(polymerization, pyrole opening, etc) but I have read some interesting things about electrolytic hydrogenation with Ni and Fe electrodes Pleased.

I have heard of using activated Copper Sulfate(IIRC) with I believe ascorbic acid for some mild redox reactions. The efficacy of which I can not vouch for.

There is also sulfurous acid(SO2 solvated in water) which is reported to suite this task.
Quote:
3.2. Reduction.
Just as aromatic amine oxides are resistant to theforegoing decomposition reactions, they are more resistant than aliphaticamine oxides to reduction. Aliphatic amine oxides are readily reduced to tertiaryamines by sulfurous acid at room temperature; in contrast, few aromatic amineoxides can be reduced under these conditions. The aliphatic amine oxides canalso be reduced by catalytic hydrogenation (27), with zinc in acid, or with stan-nous chloride (2Cool. For the aromatic amine oxides, catalytic hydrogenation withRaney nickel is a fairly general means of deoxygenation (29). Iron in acetic acid(30), phosphorus trichloride (31), and titanium trichloride (32) are also widely used systems for deoxygenation of aromatic amine oxides.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/30132815/Amine-Oxides

More than one way to skin a cat here, question is who actually has a sample of dmt-n-oxide, how was it prepared, and are they willing/able to actually test they're results?
 
DiMiTriX
#11 Posted : 9/16/2013 6:05:45 PM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 664
Joined: 07-Sep-2010
Last visit: 14-Nov-2016
Location: europe
hey what about magnesium powder? i've a ton of it..should it work? it should be more reactive than zinc since it is in the second group..what do you think? anyone has tried that yet?
Tz'is aná
 
downwardsfromzero
#12 Posted : 10/25/2013 3:19:06 AM

Boundary condition

ModeratorChemical expert

Posts: 8617
Joined: 30-Aug-2008
Last visit: 07-Nov-2024
Location: square root of minus one
The thing with zinc is, it's used dissolving in hydrochloric acid - hydrogen is thereby produced in an active form which does the job of removing the oxide. Dissolving magnesium might work but there is the possibility that it may evolve hydrogen much more quickly. This could well cause problems with foaming, etc.




β€œThere 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
 
closet-chemist1010
#13 Posted : 11/29/2013 4:28:44 AM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 98
Joined: 16-Feb-2011
Last visit: 23-Mar-2022
sodium Cyanoborohydride was mentioned, but that is a very watched chemical, A similar unwatched reducing agent is Sodium Borohydride, both are used in M..D--M,,A synth(and others) so i wouldnt jump on that route to quick
 
endlessness
#14 Posted : 11/29/2013 9:14:22 AM

DMT-Nexus member

Moderator

Posts: 14191
Joined: 19-Feb-2008
Last visit: 15-Nov-2024
Location: Jungle
Please no synth discussion when dealing with dangerous or watched chems
 
lysurgeon
#15 Posted : 12/3/2013 8:27:24 AM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 88
Joined: 13-Nov-2009
Last visit: 12-Feb-2024
According to Wikipedia, the U.S. Penny has been composed of a 99% zinc core with 2.5% copper plating since 1983. It seems cheap, as 1 cent is the value of 2.5g of 97.5% zinc. Simply file the penny down to a powder, then weigh it out.

I don't know if the copper contamination is sufficient to cause problems with oxide reduction, but there could possibly be a chloride or hydroxide of copper that may transfer to a nonpolar solvent...can't think of why this would happen. Perhaps the copper inhibits the reduction potential of the zinc, perhaps by drawing electrons?

Also, grinding up pennies is illegal, so maybe that would present a problem.
 
downwardsfromzero
#16 Posted : 12/3/2013 7:54:50 PM

Boundary condition

ModeratorChemical expert

Posts: 8617
Joined: 30-Aug-2008
Last visit: 07-Nov-2024
Location: square root of minus one
Copper might actually help a bit by forming an electrochemical couple. Zinc/copper couples are sometimes used for other reductions.




β€œThere 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
 
Dr_Sister
#17 Posted : 12/5/2013 2:55:04 AM

Synaptic cleft explorer

Chemical expert | Skills: Chemistry, Horticulture, Yoga, Meditation, Graphic/web design, MarketingSenior Member | Skills: Chemistry, Horticulture, Yoga, Meditation, Graphic/web design, Marketing

Posts: 299
Joined: 10-Dec-2010
Last visit: 13-Feb-2014
Location: good question
downwardsfromzero wrote:
Dissolving magnesium might work but there is the possibility that it may evolve hydrogen much more quickly. This could well cause problems with foaming, etc.


The rate of dissolution can be controlled with temperature to some extent, having an ice water bath on hand would probably remedy the situation. Also its rate of dissolution will depend upon how finely ground it is, more surface area = increased rate of reation
 
 
Users browsing this forum
Guest (3)

DMT-Nexus theme created by The Traveler
This page was generated in 0.040 seconds.