Ok, here is an update using the free demo of
Marvin for some of our favorite zwitterions. If anyone has access to SPARC would be very interested in that simulation using different solvents and salts, especially for psilocin (thank you).
Limitations in Marvin:
1) Must use octanol as a solvent. Wish we could change it to xylene/toluene/DCM/IPA or other more practical solvents for the home alchemist.
2) Limited to ionic strength of 0.25 molar. Also limited to NaCl/KCl as the ion provider. In practice one can get to ~6 molar for NaCl (35% solution) and ~11 molar for ammonium sulfate (~70% solution). That means we have a very limited view of the x-axis.
With that being said, this is what Marvin gives for the
log D (y-axis) at various ionic strengths in moles/liter (x-axis). The data is simulated at the iso-electric pH (pI) where the molecule is neutral and more likely to move to the solvent (for non zwitterios like DMT there is no pI point, since the molecule is simply neutral in alkaline solutions). Note that log D is simply the log of the ratio of the solvent concentration to water concentration. For example if log D = 1, then there is 10 times more of the product in the solvent than in the water (theoretically). If log D = 0, then the concentrations are the same. if log D = 2, then there is 100 times more concentration in the octanol.
We are limited to ocatnol as the solvent, but these plots may give an idea of how easily the zwitterions will leave the water and how the ionic strength affects them.
Notes:
1) Psilocybin (first image), heavily affected by ionic strength. However, it seems to not want to leave the water and log D never gets to 1 in our ionic strength scale. In the second plot Psilocybin is removed to take a closer look at the scale of interest for other zwitterions.
2) Psiclocin, affected by ionic strength. Could be pushed out when salting the water. This may be good news for the FASA approach with xylene proposed by
Orion in 2013.
3) Bufotenin, slightly affected by ionic strength. Effects of salting may be limited at high molarity compared to psilocin.
4) Harmalol, hardly affected by ionic strength. Brute-force salting may not work, a suitable solvent may be needed (Fisher used chloroform in the early 20th century to extract it from rue).
General note: For zwitterions it could be that cholorform and DCM are good solvents to pull out of water. This post is mainly looking at the salting out potential of different zwitterions. Tentative conclusion is that psilocin can be helped out of the water at high ionic strengths (assuming the trend continues beyond 0.25 M).
Loveall attached the following image(s):
log D all.jpg
(63kb) downloaded 156 time(s). lod D.jpg
(65kb) downloaded 160 time(s).