[gtranslate]
News

Espresso machines are the ideal tool for THC extraction, scientists discover

Got a hard cap espresso machine lying around? You’re now in possession of a lab-approved THC extraction device – go forth and be merry.

In an article recently published in The International Journal of Pure and Applied Analytical Chemistry, a group of researchers have hailed your average espresso machine as their go-to tool when it comes to THC extraction, CBD and CBN from cannabis buds.

That’s right – with lab-controlled, fully-developed scientific methods for chemical extraction at their disposal, these researchers chose to use a coffee machine. For over two years.

Gladys Coffee
Image: The Australian

THC, CBD and CBN are cannabinoids, the class of chemical compounds that naturally occur in cannabis plants. The three are often extracted for medical benefits, each of them contributing to the high you feel when commonly smoking or ingesting marijuana, in their own way.

THC (tetrahydrocannabinol) is what you would most commonly associate with the substance, a euphoric high which affects your behaviour and dopamine flow. CBD (cannabidiol) is extracted for common medicinal purposes such as pain relief and muscle relaxation, and CBN (cannabinol) has the lowest influence, but can reduce anxiety and relieve more specific medical conditions.

The aforementioned researchers were studying these substances, and in their two and a half years of practice became reliant on their Nespresso Essenza Manual XN2003 machine for extraction.

The method was cross-referenced against ultrasound-assisted extraction, gaschromatography-mass spectrometry and ion mobility spectrometry, and was found to produce similar results with a much lower extraction time (around one minute).

If you have a hard cap espresso machine lying around, get that lab coat on and start extracting. Not that we’d endorse such a thing.

 Check out Happy Mag Issue 10, our inaugural Drug Issue, we’re throwing our voice into building a more drug aware world. Find out more about Issue 10 here