Try isolating natural D9 from decarbed plant material using chromatography. At 90+ percent purity you will find a slightly off color (yellowish oil) at room temp.
It is not to say you cannot make the oil hard as a rock by cooling, but that is not crystalline.
You can mix D9 with THCa to a certain extent and still get contaminated THCA crystal…I’m pretty sure there is a patent on the process.
i dont know how much more solid you could get. if you have relatively pure disty then you have a giant brick. i can stab this all day long and it will only splinter off little shards of disty.
I achieved that by distillation and in an air conditioned room it’s not much of an oil as you can clearly see in the video. But if you put it out in the sun and raise the temperature a few degrees it will start becoming soft…softer.
Well, it looks great…and it seems that 4200 people
Claim they make solid THC.
My question is can you isolate crystalline THC d9 by distillation? A literature search might help.
Perhaps “distillation” does the “trick’…but not to my knowledge or experience.
The material looks great…I am sure it is very potent and smokeable…and falls in the category of perhaps amorphous solid. That pale yellow stuff is the bomb indeed. Thank you for clarifying.
The OP asks for “crystal or solid”.
For an in depth look at “crystalline THC”. Take a look at this patent:
If you read it a bit…you will understand why I asked if your material was a synthetic conversion of CBD.
Any one caring to discuss this crystallization process in more detail I would be glad to try. I have some experience with the caustic alcohol (protic) steps, but to be honest there is a bit of mystery I do not understand…i.e., caustic washes and impurities…neutral cannabinoids involving the phenolic state. These are addressed in detail in this patent….but more as an art and without detailed theory.
At 133 pages in length…it seems a bit like gobbly- gook, but it is NOT.
Yeah except that I can’t put the water glass shreds out in the sun for a few minutes and have the water glass come back together as if nothing ever happened.