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In many of the amateur chemist procedures that I've read online around tryptophan decarboxylation, acetone is used as the extracting solvent sometimes even used as the catalyst for the decarboxylation itself. Ketones and aldehydes readily form imines with primary amines, in our context "n-isopropylidene-tryptamine," this contamination is accelerated when an acid/base extraction is performed as the addition of any acid catalyzes the amine to imine reaction.
My guess is acetone is used due to how easy it is to obtain, however it's an easy way to containment your end product. Chloroform and DCM can be used but aren't very OTC friendly, there are certainly easier solvents to obtain but I'd need to do some more digging on that.
Would anyone be able to shed some light on substitutes for solvents and if the ketones used during the decarboxylation/extraction are a problem for the purity of the desired end product?
My guess is acetone is used due to how easy it is to obtain, however it's an easy way to containment your end product. Chloroform and DCM can be used but aren't very OTC friendly, there are certainly easier solvents to obtain but I'd need to do some more digging on that.
Would anyone be able to shed some light on substitutes for solvents and if the ketones used during the decarboxylation/extraction are a problem for the purity of the desired end product?