Yea, I was skeptical about my plan original plan too. I cooked it up in my mind because I was thinking about dehydration. At first I though about distilling the water off, but I read somewhere that citric acid forms an azeotrope with water at around 50%, which isn't really what I want.
Then again hypothetically at 50%, given that all you had was citric acid and water, that would be a monohydrate I believe.
Alberto_Kravina got my plan right. I want the fun in extracting it from the natural product. I was aware that you can buy it in stores. I think I'll have to purchase some calcium hydroxide for this though.
I took this from wikipedia.
At room temperature, citric acid is a white crystalline powder. It can exist either in an anhydrous (water-free) form, or as a monohydrate that contains one water molecule for every molecule of citric acid. The anhydrous form crystallizes from hot water, while the monohydrate forms when citric acid is crystallized from cold water. The monohydrate can be converted to the anhydrous form by heating it above 74 °C.
From that wording it sounds almost like if I heat the lemon juice, I'll get my citric acid.
The Ca(OH)
2 method sounds the most promising. Question about it though is, "How will get what's left of the sulfuric acid out?" I have to admit I know nothing about how reprotenation occurs.