Have come across lots of heavy metal contaminated biomass in the market now that we are independantly pretesting all biomass prior to purchase. The problem, at least in my small sampling from reputable farms, seems to be an epidemic from my vantage point.
I now have a problem with a shortage of material to run and am wondering about techniques for removing heavy metals. I am a little familiar with pesticide remediation but have no clue about the removal of heavy metals. Will distillation alone do the job or is another step/process required to accomplish this?
Our T5 clay has heavy metal trapping properties when used as a scrub or filtration media. We are launching DGC (degumming clay) after the RnD period ends and that clay also helps remove heavy metals through chelation.
You can use our products on crude oil, processed crude, and distillate. We offer, both personally and through retailers, volume discounts to make these products commercially viable at scale.
Will this work for producing BHO products like shatter and sauce if used like in the BHO color remediation thread? pack some pucks in a tube and filter it through there before the collection pot?
Yes, every reference you see to T5 clay is the same product supplied by Carbon Chemistry. It is used in both heavy metal remediation, filtration, and product improvement as seen in the CRC thread. @TriPro
Lead is not ferromagnetic… so it wont pull right out like iron would… There is talk of weak magnetic interactions, but those would not be suitable for rapid removal of these soil contaminants.