Elrik
Hazard to Self
Posts: 52
Registered: 1-9-2018
Member Is Offline
|
|
Chemistry Gardening
Its the time when I can start planning what will be in next years garden and I'm largely drawing a blank on ideas for new plants that could produce
materials of general use in the organic chemistry lab, so I was wondering if others knew of plants with such general usefulness.
Some examples are the easy and surprisingly high yielding production of furfural from corn cobs, ethanol from sugar beets, I've seen spearmint oil
used in decarboxylations as the main constituent carvone is a good catalyst for those reactions, and while more of a wild-harvest plant scotch broom
can yield sparteine used as a chiral ligand.
I wouldnt mind an otherwise unreactive tertiary amine to use in place of triethylamine. Tobacco is easy to grow but pure nicotine is just too
poisonous for a general use like that. Nicotiana glauca produces a good yield of the less poisonous alkaloid anabasine [3-(2-piperidyl)pyridine] as
nearly the sole alkaloid but as a secondary amine it would be less generally useful.
Are there plants you've considered growing for reasonable yield of useful catalysts or reagents?
|
|
j_sum1
Administrator
Posts: 6324
Registered: 4-10-2014
Location: At home
Member Is Offline
Mood: Most of the ducks are in a row
|
|
I know nearly nothing. But my first choice would be some thyme for thymol.
|
|
Sulaiman
International Hazard
Posts: 3698
Registered: 8-2-2015
Location: 3rd rock from the sun
Member Is Offline
|
|
Rhubarb stems for cooking and leaves for oxalic acid ?
I gave it one try my first year of chemistry hobby and abandoned the extraction due to frustration
The following year I relocated the rhubarb and it died.
|
|
macckone
Dispenser of practical lab wisdom
Posts: 2168
Registered: 1-3-2013
Location: Over a mile high
Member Is Offline
Mood: Electrical
|
|
Let us not forget red cabbage for indicator.
Most of the plant produced chemicals I can think of are drugs.
Some controlled drugs (morning glories, poppies) and some not (foxglove).
Benzoic acid is produced by some plants but not much.
Rubbers and gums of various kinds.
Tannins from appropriate plants.
Dyes from another subset of plants.
Pepper compounds some of which lead to drugs.
Safrole from sassafrass again drugs.
Ephedrine species - drugs.
Gallic acid - specific infection in plants.
Obviously wood for methanol and cellulose.
Sugar cane for sugar and then ethanol and acetic acid.
acetic acid can be converted to acetone via decarboxylation of calcium acetate.
ethanol can be converted to ethylene, ethyl ether and ethane.
acetone can be converted to isopropyl alcohol and then propylene and propane.
Sugar can also be converted to carbon and then acetylene.
Decomposing plant matter can produce methane.
Sugar can also produce oxalic acid.
Basically from sugar and wood you can produce almost any organic chemical given the correct reagents to do the reaction and as long as yields aren't a
major concern. And lots of plants can and are used as starting materials for drugs.
|
|
Swinfi2
Hazard to Others
Posts: 131
Registered: 19-2-2018
Location: England
Member Is Offline
Mood: Catalytic
|
|
I just got some wintergreen seeds (Gaultheria Procumbens) should be an easy jumping off point for getting methyl salicylate, hydrolysis gives
salicilic acid, transesterification with AcOH should yield aspirin, decarboxylation leads to phenol etc.
Seems like a good plant to have in an apocalypse. (Since its not native here)
And who doesn't like mint berries?
[Edited on 6-10-2018 by Swinfi2]
|
|
Elrik
Hazard to Self
Posts: 52
Registered: 1-9-2018
Member Is Offline
|
|
Rhubarb is a good one. The root is also used as digestive medicine. Sugar beet greens could similarly yield soluble oxalate to process.
Fun fact that many gardeners can tell you, if you collect your own urine and it routinely gets a day or more old in the jug, sheets of calcium oxalate
crystals will accumulate in the bottom.
Red cabbage is, indeed, a classic universal pH indicator. Black beans are useful as well, green above pH 7, pink below, grey or purpleish at pH 7.
Tannin was an interesting suggestion. I have a feral mess of Sanguisorba plants I could extract and tannin could indicate for some metals or
precipitate some alkaloids.
Woad or indigo would be fun for making dye, but I'm not sure if they could be processed to make any generally useful lab chemicals. I need to dust off
80 year old books.
I thought I remembered in middle school reading in some 1920's chemistry text that sucrose could be heated with something very common, like epsom's
salts, to obtain a useful acid or aldehyde in reasonable purity but searching google scholar now doesnt reveal anything that makes something other
than a mess of lots of different things, lol
A sugar reaction I do remember is heating with an amino acid for the oxidative decomposition to an aldehyde 1 carbon shorter. Sugar is dirt cheap in
stores though.
[Edited on 2018-10-6 by Elrik]
|
|
unionised
International Hazard
Posts: 5126
Registered: 1-11-2003
Location: UK
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Elrik |
Fun fact that many gardeners can tell you, if you collect your own urine and it routinely gets a day or more old in the jug, sheets of calcium oxalate
crystals will accumulate in the bottom.
[Edited on 2018-10-6 by Elrik] |
In at least some people's cases the precipitate will be uric acid.
Fairly easy to distinguish- uric acid's a lot more soluble in alkali.
|
|
beerwiz
Hazard to Others
Posts: 130
Registered: 6-2-2014
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Add Persian poppies (Papaver bracteatum, 50% thebaine content) to your list, Bentley compounds will make your rich!
|
|
Elrik
Hazard to Self
Posts: 52
Registered: 1-9-2018
Member Is Offline
|
|
I do not regard illicit opioids as useful compounds.
|
|
symboom
International Hazard
Posts: 1143
Registered: 11-11-2010
Location: Wrongplanet
Member Is Offline
Mood: Doing science while it is still legal since 2010
|
|
There is hundreds sepcies of plants that can work just as good as illicit drugs anyway
Kratom and akuamma very little is known about these plants and the compounds which they contain but what is known is it is ingestable pain releving
plant.
thebaine is chemically similar to both morphine and codeine, but has stimulatory rather than depressant effects. Sounds like what cocaine is suppose
to be.
Probally why its ilegal status.
High risk for addiction and dependence. Can cause respiratory distress and death when taken in high doses or when combined with other substances,
especially alcohol.
Back on topic
produce materials of general use in the organic chemistry lab
Lemonene from lemons as a solvent
Anisole, or methoxybenzene, It is an ether from anise seeds
benzaldehyde from bitter almond oil
Off topic a little
Pine trees we once used for gasoline replacrment in ww2 due to there high turpine contentand not much carborator adjustment.
And if you have any left over plastic it can be distilled to produce oil and benzene.
[Edited on 8-10-2018 by symboom]
|
|
diddi
National Hazard
Posts: 723
Registered: 23-9-2014
Location: Victoria, Australia
Member Is Offline
Mood: Fluorescent
|
|
eucalyptus olida. if you can find some seed
Beginning construction of periodic table display
|
|
Ubya
International Hazard
Posts: 1247
Registered: 23-11-2017
Location: Rome-Italy
Member Is Offline
Mood: I'm a maddo scientisto!!!
|
|
Maybe Dysphania Ambrosio ides (wormseed) could be fun, it's essential oil contains ascaridole (up to 70%), limonene, p-cymene, and smaller amounts of
numerous other monoterpenes and monoterpene derivatives (α-pinene, myrcene, terpinene, thymol, camphor and trans-isocarveol), but the fun part is the
ascaridole, an organic peroxide, nice for explosions. Exploding plant oil
---------------------------------------------------------------------
feel free to correct my grammar, or any mistakes i make
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Sulaiman
International Hazard
Posts: 3698
Registered: 8-2-2015
Location: 3rd rock from the sun
Member Is Offline
|
|
Wherever we live we always grow a little Aloe Vera,
we use it on minor burns, and it soothes minor cuts and abrasions,
anything that does not require hospital treatment.
An apple tree adds height and interest to a garden
and supplies apples for fermentation.
I have some apples fermenting as I write
- for vinegar, others prefer cider, or you could distil for ethanol)
Similarly pear and plum trees (and probably others that I've not tried) provide bumper crops of fruit for eating, cooking or fermenting.
I have encouraged blackberry bushes to spread along the outside of my rear fence,
it prevents kids from considering burglary of my lab/shed
(I'm more worried that kids will cause or suffer harm than I am of losing stuff)
and provides a crop of berries, for eating, cooking or fermenting.
Gooseberries make excellent wine.
(tale to tell if asked)
On a purely gardening note,
having a variety of trees, shrubs, flowers, including fruit and vegetable flowers,
and especially a small pond,
increases life and interest massively.
If you feel depressed, sit in a garden - or make one.
|
|