eugeneoregon
Active Member
It works great as a periscope. It is crystal and does not mind the heat. Cheapest piece of glass in my house!!!
I believe your pressure prediction to be innacurate and at odds with the observable facts. Let me explain.Great work EO.
I saw your stuff on youtube too and posted a comment but all was disappointed it was all deleted before I had your reply.
Was wondering about the actual pressure within the still
At the low Pressures you are working (molecular flow), I was wondering if you had tried any experiments with widening and shortening the connection between the bellows and still. The pressure in the still is very likely higher than where you have the gauge located, but there is no way to insert the gauge into lab glassware. All you can do is make the connection as wide and short as possible.
The fact that you are able to distill the good stuff at about 138 degree C likely means your are attaining a high vacuum within the still. From a practical viewpoint that is a good enough vacuum, as it is below the degradation point of THC which begins around 200C
On one of BP open sources videos, they are at around 200 microns (by their gauge) and the head temp is 211C when the good stuff comes over. The published value is 155-157C at 50 microns. If these are correct (a big IF), the pressure in your still is 34 microns. It also gives the heat of evaporation as 31.8 kJ/mole.
Keep up the good work
It is apparent to me that there is no reliable data on THC which is why I find your work so interesting and valuable. I appreciate your efforts.
The value I gave at 50 microns is also a published value
I can't post links so look up "Isolation, Structure, and Partial Synthesis of an Active Constituent of Hashish" in the Journal of the American Chemical Society
One of these published values must be wrong as the BP must be lower at a lower pressure, not higher. Who knows which is correct.
And to me, all of these values are suspect due to the method of pressure measurement. They are all measured on the other side of a small barbed connection which has a very high resistance at very low pressures so the pressure is undoubtedly somewhat higher in the still.
In the molecular flow regime you can use this table to calculate the conductance of any tubes. Valves and elbows are also a problem
I cant post links so google Lesker Dushman's Table
as you can see a connector with a 0.4 cm inner diameter and 1 cm long will only allow a pumping speed of about 0.3 l/sec, no matter what your pump speed is, and a small amount of water vapour, alcohol, off-gassing, or tiny leaks will make the pressure in the still higher than at your gauge.
You may be able to check this by attaching your bellows directly to one of the pigs (or Kugelrohr bulb) ground glass joints, with as large a quality tube as you have. This would give a shorter wider connection and would decrease the pressure in your still and make the gauge a more accurate representation of the pressure in it.
The one from open sources may be accurate because at 200 microns they are in viscous and not molecular flow. They had 211C at about 200 microns.
there is a useful tool if you google BOILING POINT CALCULATOR from trimen.pl to see which points fit
It would be great if you could solve this question once and for all. No one else has been able to.
And it is all about good medicine my friend.
Nice work.well I messed that up it should have said BP at 20 of 200C