I recently did a test of alkaloid partitioning in water -vs- organic at various pH values using the WTA made from the Thunder Snus that KathyD26 sent me (
her impressions here). I was a little grumpy because I had to take my purified and isolated alkaloids and put them in water/organic and start hitting it with acids and bases to get the various pH values to eyeball where (which phase) the tinted alkaloids ended up and it would be a lot more work to re-isolate them. But since several hundred mg of alkaloids is nothing to waste, I went through the steps to isolate these alkaloids this evening, and decided to see what might happen if I went to extremes and did a couple more exchanges of the already essentially pure alkaloids.
The first observation I could make after reducing to pure alkaloids is that each acid/base exchange pair takes a bit of a toll on the alkaloid yield. I know what I started with, and I know what I got back in the end. The extra cleanup steps appeared to take about a 10% share each, so I lost a good 20%. Worth it? Probably not due to the fact that these alkaloids were already essentially pure from the extraction/cleanup previously done. However, the extra steps did take a bit off the tint, not much, but a little. Here's 20 mg/mL of extra-purified akaloids in VG/PG -vs- deionized water.
That's some mighty tasty alkaloids.
This suggests that the cleanup steps I've done to go from a more technical alkaloid grade (alkaloids plus a good bit of tobacco matrix) to a purified grade probably reduce my yield a good 20%. Which would further suggest that if I'm consistently getting about 12 mg alkaloid per gram of tobacco, I'm probably extracting a bit more, perhaps 15 mg/g and losing some of them for the sake of purity, which further suggests that American Spirit tobacco is probably at least 1.5% alkaloids. If I had to take a good hard guess, I'd say that the available alkaloids (if a 100% extraction efficiency could be achieved, it really can't.. at least not without heroic effort) would be closer to 1.8 - 2%... which would be very much in line with American Spirits' reputation as a good strong tobacco. (There's nothing authoritative about this guess, so don't quote it as gospel...it's just my chemists' gut feeling). If 2% were the working guess, this would mean I'm getting 60% in the end, from about a 75% extraction.
I also need to eventually reconcile the color of the alkaloid isolate obtained from a sodium carbonate/mineral oil extraction -vs- my normal procedure. The isolate from the sodium carbonate/mineral oil extraction was noticeably less tinted than that which I consistently get with my lab procedure. Since the pH is pretty tightly controlled, I have to wonder if it's not something about the mineral oil. I can't speculate too far on why the color is different (That's why we have Kin!), but it's worth running to ground. Perhaps the oil extraction doesn't pull alkaloids from the tobacco quite as aggressively as my procedure? This would suggest a somewhat modified alkaloid profile in the oil extraction product -vs- my lab extraction. If this were the case, what would it mean for the efficacy of the alkaloids from an oil extraction? I would hope not very much, but again, it just something that I think I need to look at some more. The proof is, as they say, in the pudding, and if an oil extraction is doing x-factor duty acceptably, then it's got what it needs to have.
Lol.. so many tests, so little desire to do them all!
Anyone else tired of listening to me talk, or am I the only one?