September 26, 2008

crystals

Some pretty sweet dark red/purple (or dark green!) crystals have come my way. More on these later as I procure a better camera. The camera on the cell phone does these beauties no justice.

September 25, 2008

Soxhlet Extractor

The Soxhlet extractor is one neat peice of equipment. It is used in conjunction with a solvent in which what you want is slightly soluble, and what you don't want is totally insoluble. The advantage is that you end up using significantly less solvent in the extraction process, and once it is up and running, it can be left unattended for long periods of time. The matter for extraction is the green powder I posted in the previous blog entry. The setup is shown to the right. I'm using n-hexane as a solvent in this extraction, which is collected in the round bottom flask. This was vacuum transferred into the extractor using the Teflon pin you can see in the top left of the photo. The black hose is connected to the Schlenk line. I did not backfill the extractor with inert gas, which means I can operate the extractor at lower energy (longer times between filling the bucket with ice). At the bottom is a stir plate with a heating element. I keep a pretty vigorous stir going to prevent the hexane from bumping. The dish around the round bottom flask is empty in the picture, but I filled it with water and set the temperature on the heating element to be just around 25-30 C. (The hexane will cool as it is evaporated, so you have to put heat back into the system. The bucket is filled with ice water. One hose connects the pump to the cold finger and the other drains back into the bucket. All of the green material from the previous post is inside the paper thimbles you can see in the center of the extractor. The large glass tube on the far left is the vapor transfer tube. "Warm" hexane vapor travels up this tube at about 30 C and condenses on the cold finger, which is at about 0 C (from the ice bath). As the liquid condenses it drips down onto the paper thimbles holding the material. The material I want (light yellow green color) is dissolved. Eventually the level of solvent in the extraction chamber reaches above the bend in the return tube. This is the small squiggly tube in between the vapor transfer tube and the extraction chamber. When this happens the solution in the extraction chamber is siphoned back down the return tube into the round bottom, leaving behind the insoluble materials. This process is repeated a couple hundred times, concentrating the desired material down in the bottom flask. All in all a pretty nifty piece of equipment!