syberdelic wrote:I think the bottom line here is that any extraction tek might have a list of safe/acceptable substitutions as far as chemicals and vessels, but saying that something is "safe" in such a broad brush stroke is a vital mistake.
Very sensible and very true!
Old_Soul wrote:Im going to start with glass but what about porcelain or ceramic or stainless steel?
Porcelain and other ceramics should be fine if they are glazed and not raw fired clay. The glaze itself is made of glass. Steel is fine for neutral and mildly acidic solutions, but I wouldn't use strong bases or acids around metals anyway. Glass bottles are great but the lids almost always defeat the object of using glass, as they are often cork, plastic or aluminum (which reacts with lye and eventually leaks). I'd love to find big glass bottles with steel or glass lids, or even PTFE.
HDPE is not good with non-polar solvents such as naphtha unless you plan to salt out the alkaloids, leaving any leached plastics behind.
You can do the whole drytek method with lime in one glass beaker. Steel spoon to mix. A good way to be safe is to keep it simple and that's as simple as it gets.
Art Van D'lay wrote:Smoalk. It. And. See.