Hello Forum,
I've been wracking my brain with this question for weeks now and can't seem to find the sweet spot. After winterizing CO2 output in 200 proof ethanol, using a rotary evaporator for ethanol purge/recovery (52C, 27.5" Hg), I cannot get anywhere near some dispensaries 500 PPM residual requirement (practically 100% purge). The state has no standard. Looking at the FDA guidelines for pharmaceuticals, I see they recommend a 5,000 PPM (more a 50mg/day for a 50 kg person) for Class III solvents (ethanol... ). Anyway the lowest residual I've achieved is1500 PPM and that was after extremely heating the oil (not quite decarb) for a long period. Can you feel the frustration? Not sure if it's a bogus standard or if I've just missed some critical step... probably the latter.
So these are a few of my specific questions.
1. Is the 500 PPM figure unrealistic to achieve without killing off all terps and flavor?
2. Some companies apparently are achieving this number... how do they do it? Vac ovens? ambient purging on thin film, adding water at the last part of the purge... hot stirrer plate? I've tried all of these with no success.
3. I've heard that Washington State does not even test for residual with "food grade" ethanol is used as a solvent or in winterization (yes... still a solvent).
Thank you very much for reading this and for any information you can give.
I've been wracking my brain with this question for weeks now and can't seem to find the sweet spot. After winterizing CO2 output in 200 proof ethanol, using a rotary evaporator for ethanol purge/recovery (52C, 27.5" Hg), I cannot get anywhere near some dispensaries 500 PPM residual requirement (practically 100% purge). The state has no standard. Looking at the FDA guidelines for pharmaceuticals, I see they recommend a 5,000 PPM (more a 50mg/day for a 50 kg person) for Class III solvents (ethanol... ). Anyway the lowest residual I've achieved is1500 PPM and that was after extremely heating the oil (not quite decarb) for a long period. Can you feel the frustration? Not sure if it's a bogus standard or if I've just missed some critical step... probably the latter.
So these are a few of my specific questions.
1. Is the 500 PPM figure unrealistic to achieve without killing off all terps and flavor?
2. Some companies apparently are achieving this number... how do they do it? Vac ovens? ambient purging on thin film, adding water at the last part of the purge... hot stirrer plate? I've tried all of these with no success.
3. I've heard that Washington State does not even test for residual with "food grade" ethanol is used as a solvent or in winterization (yes... still a solvent).
Thank you very much for reading this and for any information you can give.