Hi everyone,
Sorry, I may have posted this in the wrong section (I couldn't decide between this and Other Sciences). I realize that this is rather fringe chemistry, but here goes:
I've been interested in making essential oils for some time, and after doing some research I figured that soxhlet extraction would easily fulfill my needs by both extracting volatile organics as well as other substances within plants themselves for other purposes. However, one thing I didn't consider was actually the process of making an OIL as opposed to a watery mixture.
The Problem: After performing an extraction with water, I've created an amber, translucent solution. However, since I'm looking for OILS, I need to figure out a way to get them out of mixture. I realize that due to polarity issues there might not be much oil in my sample, but I figured there might be "stowaway" oils.
What I've Tried: I extracted some juniper using only water yesterday (and it smells great). I tried letting it sit around to let any layers form, but that hasn't worked at all, and I'm reluctant to add any other chemicals before I know what I'm doing.
My Proposed Solution: I was thinking of mixing in diethyl ether and using a separatory funnel type of setup, then evaporating off the ether. For the future, I'd try to use ethanol to dissolve more oils. Also, would it be possible to use ether from a typical home improvement store? Or would that be too dangerous?
For the future, I figured that my process would be more along the lines of:
1. Run the extraction with dilute ethanol instead.
2. Use ether afterwards to separate non-oils.
3. Separate.
However, I am getting a little bit of a spidey-sense saying I'm doing something wrong. If there's some process or something I'm missing, please let me know!
Thanks,
Jelly