Okay after some more learning, I got little bit more concerned about tannins of acacias, in particular MHRB.
My A/B extractions often end up in emulsified mess even though I dilute the mother liquor, use different solvents, different amounts of base etc.
Now I found that MHRB might actually be a pretty bad candidate for acid-base extraction. First of all, it is rich saponins, which are actually
emulsifiers or soaps (!). They have both polar and nonpolar parts of the molecule, thus can bring the two solvents together (something we don't want).
MHRB also contains simple phenolic compounds such as catechol and pyrogallol. If one adds too much of a strong base (NaOH, KOH), reactive phenolates/alkoxides are formed. I used to add just a lots of base, but now I am more careful...
Strong bases also hydrolyze tannins. This applies only to so called "hydrolyzable tannins". These are ester of carboxylic acids (e.g. EGCG = epigallocatechin gallate, is a gallocatechin ester of gallic acid). NaOH or KOH with break the ester bond, releasing the carboxylic acid as sodium/potassium salt. I found that re-acidifying the mother liquor causes HUGE precipitation and thickening. This might be caused by the gallic acid as it has poor water solubility, but maybe just caused by the acid salt formation.
Fortunately, MHRB seems to contain mostly non-hydrolyzable (i.e. condensed) tannins. These have varying water solubility and might be responsible for the changes in mother liquor viscosity depending on temperature.
Condensed tannins can be removed with formaldehyde, which causes their polymerization and subsequent precipitation in a so called
Phenol-formaldehyde resin (the tannins are cross linked by methylene bridges: -CH2- coming from the formaldehyde: O=CH2) . This is certainly not advisable as formaldehyde is hazardous for amateurs. The resinification process might also trap alkaloids.
There are interesting studies into the utilization of such resins, even from Mimosa tenuiflora specifically.
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After looking into these topics, I will try filtering re-acidified mother liquor before final basification and extraction. This will be done to remove impurities of the phenolic kind.
I will also revisit dry teks and using other solvents (acetone, ethanol etc.) to avoid issues of hydrolysis.
Finally, I will revisit using weaker base, like sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) instead of sodium hydroxide (NaOH), to prevent ester hydrolysis and the formation of alkoxides.
Initial extraction from damp basified MHRB paste with acetone OR with ethanolic ammonia followed by re-acidification, filtering and then extraction.