Sciencemadness Discussion Board
Not logged in [Login ]
Go To Bottom

Printable Version  
Author: Subject: Is it necessary to freeze organisms before you extract chems from them?
Boba155
Harmless
*




Posts: 16
Registered: 10-5-2011
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 5-9-2011 at 19:15
Is it necessary to freeze organisms before you extract chems from them?


Buying plants from overseas to extract, do I need to have them frozen? Or is this simply a precaution.

View user's profile View All Posts By User
Bot0nist
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1559
Registered: 15-2-2011
Location: Right behind you.
Member Is Offline

Mood: Streching my cotyledons.

[*] posted on 5-9-2011 at 20:22


Depends on what your trying to extract and its stability. Also, freezing some plant matter help with extraction as the ice crystals that form inside the plants cells breaks open the rigid cell walls. Can you be more specific?



U.T.F.S.E. and learn the joys of autodidacticism!


Don't judge each day only by the harvest you reap, but also by the seeds you sow.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Endimion17
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1468
Registered: 17-7-2011
Location: shores of a solar sea
Member Is Offline

Mood: speeding through time at the rate of 1 second per second

[*] posted on 6-9-2011 at 03:30


Traditionally, plants are dried, and most of the stuff people were extracting from them isn't harmed in that way.
Drying is cheaper than keeping them frozen, but for some applications they can be kept on dry ice. I presume it's for isolating/detecting very small amounts of very complex molecules like proteins. It's not really used for actual extractions of useable amounts.

Of course once they're freezed the cells are destroyed, and if the ice is thawed bacterial decomposition takes place at a really quick rate.
Freeze drying is a nice method...




View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
Cason
Harmless
*




Posts: 5
Registered: 6-9-2011
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 6-9-2011 at 15:47


@Endimion: " I presume it's for isolating/detecting very small amounts of very complex molecules like proteins. It's not really used for actual extractions of useable amounts...."
Not necessarily- One might be extracting the phenolic cmpds from berry plants or the terpenes from a sunflower species and the quantities could be significant. Opium is a gum that oozes out of poppies and contains some 23 alkaloids in quite usable amounts ;^)




A little con H2SO4 will take care of most glassware grunge.
View user's profile View All Posts By User

  Go To Top