Ulim I have now more info about the base density difference being yes/no responsible for the drastic differences in settling time. It was a good call intuitively as lye-water becomes noticeably more viscous with rising concentration, while ammonia does not so. Yet with more study done this route should be left.
.
1) About how much of lye concentration are we talking about, is it any relevant?Basing syrian rue tea is nothing like basing bark soup for making pulls.
For working on extracts of 260gr SR seeds in a 1.15 liter liquid, which was first made pH 2.75 with phosphoric acid, then basing this with 50ml of 8mol/liter NaOh, made it pH 12.5.
So we used a frail 16 gr worth of corresponding dry lye in this {1.15 liter + crystals} to get to pH 12.5
* Any visual clue of viscosity rise fails, e.g. dripping it of a spoon.
* At exact same 23degC room temperature at initial pH 2.75 the density was 1.008 while at lye-ed status pH 12.5 the density was 1.015. That is a 0.7% rise in density only, no wonder we could not observe difference eye wise.
2) We have strong new indications that another factor is key:Any of the observations made about the huge settling speed differences in the previous posts, concern syrian rue extract before a manske was made.Once 1 manske is done the situation suddenly changes and there is in practical terms no difference in settling speed anymore albeit one uses ammonia or lye. So much for density difference between ammonia and lye as a used base.
Why does that 1 manske plays such a role? Intuitively it would not make much sense.
I think to have incidentally an augmented case here where that difference got really pumped up to extremes. When basing my manske filtrate (out of curiosity) I got an amazing ton of slime as never seen before, see pic on the left. Under microscope there is not one single crystal, it is all a blubber very hard to filter.
My first thought was that diluted harmalas might suffer crystal forming and produce that slime, but I concentrated the slime-component high enough to abandon this possibility.
It seems ammonia or lye have a different effect on the slime component within the rue extract before manske, resulting in a huge settling speed difference.
.
The out of manske obtained rueHCL crystals got filtered + redissolved to pH 2.75 and re-based with lye to 12.5 and fairly fast settling occurred with only crystals to notice under microscope, no blubber. See picture on the right.
.
This re-opens for me the case: what the hell is this blubber?
It's said before and tested to be harmalas but why does it behave so darn differently on many aspects? As to why I got so much of it this time: maybe because I used a pressure pot (at highest setting, it has 2) and a lot of washes, I didn't count but proceeded as long as I got precipitations on basing, estimated 8 - 9 washes or so. It did occur to me that the very last wash, once based it did indeed started to look more like a slime than crystals, and that was before a manske!!
- Did the overkill on pressurized washes give me more of that slime?
- Did the phosphoric acid I used on the washes promote the slime component?
If I can get it filtered somehow (that's gonna be hard) I would like to have the slime analyzed. The above-slime liquid color indicate there are at least traces of harmalas though.
Conclusion so far:is cases where not so much of that slime-component was derived from the seeds, there will probably be less a difference in settling speed between using ammonia or lye as a base. Still referring to
before the very first manske status! Yet if you have a free choice then ammonia does a quicker job. After a manske there's no real difference whatever base you use.
Jees attached the following image(s):
slime.03.jpg
(112kb) downloaded 229 time(s).