Harmala extraction always includes the step of precipitating Harmala*HCl as a purification stepnamed after Alkaloid-Chemist Richard Manske. During my first Harmala extraction I totally failed at it, as the resulting crystals were way too fine to filter so it was not doing anything. I even tried a budget camping pump in order to vacuum pump it with my car-cigarette-lighter and nothing worked
From that point I simply made
- cook seeds in pH 3 water
- filter
- basify to pH 10+
- wash until neutral
- decant
And at least from the practical side I did never encounter any unwanted effects or similar that could be created by contaminants.
Now years ago there was an NMR analysis on some freebase powder seen
here It shows no Vasicin and also no other signals anywhere.
But these might still be hiding below the measured signals and furthermore NMR is not capable of catching up trace components. Still any other substances hiding here would only be trace compounds, so from a perspective of consumption that material would be indeed totally safe and at least 95-100 % pure Harmalas and the Manske-step probably rather cosmetic. As far as I know this step is anyways designed to get rid of vasicin, which would be present here at > 1 %, which would make 2 mg eaten when you ingest a full dose, so even at maximum near 0. VDS protocols are even saying kitchen chemistry harmala extraction would be producing dangerous products, that was the original intent for harm reduction. I am not really aware of what methods were used which could keep dangerous by-products, but at least the analysis above cant prove anything which would account for that. But well maybe they account for kitchen-methods for THH conversion and not specify Harmala extraction methods as dangerous.
But it made me still wondering because of 2 reasons:
But this stuff will not dissolve 100 % even in strong HCl and always some brown stuff remains ...
When measuring NMR there is always some brown stuff remaining, too, even if you use DMSO.
In both cases it is quite a considerable amount, like 20 % of the total alkaloids. But as those extracts are still 95+ % pure Harmalas this seems rather strange to me.
So as I cant measure MS / HPLC / GC since a long time I did not bother, but now sent a sample to a friend for analysis and to see if there is indeed still something else hiding, which would ultimately justify this additional Manske step.
First just an NMR from that recent sample:
First analysis above was roughly 1:1 Harmin:Harmalin and this is now 1:1,3 Harmin:Harmalin. Besides still shows no real sign of contaminants, but as last time something could be still hiding here and also I already told that not everything dissolves, so maybe that remainder is a true contamination.
Now here is the HPLC Chromatogram. This method has the benefit of using a much lower concentration than NMR. Therefore I was told all the material dissolved 100 % in ultra-sonic bath and therefore we will be sure that we analyze 100 % of the material. Seems it was overloaded, but in this case that might even be desired as that increases sensitivity for trace compounds even more:
Only one very big peak = Harmin + Harmalin ( ~ 8,7 min)
Those are chemically nearly identical so they are not separated here due to high concentration. But any other Alkaloid that would be realistically found in those seeds will run at a noticable different time. Still everything that can be seen is a minor peak earlier (~ 8,2 min) and even with this heavy overload they only make up 1,1 %, so in reality probably less than 0,1 %. Therefore I would conclude this is basically a pure compound.
Now also just for complecity the ESI MS included to show that the (nearly) pure chemical is just the 2 Harmala Alkaloids:
So 2 masses found that exactly correspond to Harmine / Harmaline + 1H+ = 212+1 u / 215+1 u
So to conclude the NMR results never showed any signs of contaminations if you simply skip the Manske step. But there still remains some uncertainty which cannot ultimately prove that Manske is not needed for purification. Now with the HPLC / MS it shows that even when 100 % material is analyzed it shows far more than 99 % of pure Harmin/Harmalin mix. So I would really say that this step is unnecessary. Sadly I cannot read in the VDS protocols what exactly is avoided when going this route.
Quote:Upon reading the techniques for alkaloid extraction, purification and conversion on these popular sites, many are observed to be chemically incorrect. This is a real cause of intoxications for misinformed user.
Literature quotes given here as far as I see mostly speak about intoxication of simply too high levels of Harmalas? No mentioning of dangerous by-products of extraction.
So now with a shorter isolation pathway the product seems just perfectly fine for me. Cannot conclude anything now that would justify the concerns or the Manske step - just
pure Harmine / Harmaline.
Therefore the procedure I always do seems just fine for me to create Harmalas, I never got any problems and analysis is proving too:
1. Boil seeds at pH 3 for 30 min at 80 °C
2. Strain and repeat
3. Combine and settle down particles
4. Decant
5. Basify to pH 10+
"Workup":
6. Pour Harmala-water into BIG container and fill with water
7. Wait 10 min for harmalas to settle
8. Decant and repeatDo this as many times until you reach pH < 8. Interestingly that nearly always converged with having a totally clear water surfactant, no colour anymore in the water - in case you have no pH meter. You can easily throw a 500 g extraction into a 10 L bucket and decant from this, which will make it much faster. Harmala solubility is so bad, that it goes to nearly 0 in water and you will not loose any even with that huge water volume.
10. Put last Harmala droplets on a plate and dry in oven at 50 °C with ventilation on.Super easy and not even 1 single filtering step included