So today I wanted to release my special technique for color remediation of just about every single unwanted compound from your extracts. This works with Butane, Ethanol, and Hexane. It is slightly more effective with Alkanes due to their non-polarity and the polar attractant nature of the filtration media, but the media are still more polar than ethanol resulting in them still working, just less efficiently.

When using hexane or ethanol as my solvent, my primary goal during these experiments was to remove as many impurities as possible while creating a crude oil that required no pre or post-processing (before or after a first pass distillation). My priorities regarding butane focused on remediating as many impurities as possible resulting in high clarity, low color shatter, even from older material. I was able to achieve both goals.

The ratios and amounts of media will change based on the quality and freshness of material, the solvent being used, and the amount of material used. I will try to give ratios for each solvent and freshness of the material.

Now onto The Technique!
The simple explanation is that you use adsorbent media to target certain compounds in conjunction with one another to remove as many impurities as possible with a single pass. The media must not become over or under saturated. Oversaturation of your media means that impurities will pass through without being filtered. Under saturation of the media will cause the media to retain cannabinoids resulting in a loss of yield. This is why respecting the ratios, understanding what each media removes and in what order they remove them is important. I will explain briefly what each media targets.

Activated Magnesium Silicate
Activated magnesium silicate has the perfect pore size to grab lipids. This makes it a prime candidate to be the very top media in your stack. If your method of extraction brings along any lipids, removing them first with magnesium silicate will make all the rest of the media much more effective.

Activated Silica Gel
Activated silica gel adsorbs chlorophyll, carotenoids and other hydrophilic impurities. These are your dark greens and oranges. Silica Gel does the heavy lifting for remediation of very dark colors.

50/50 PVPP/Activated Carbon blend
Polyvinylpolypyrrolidone (PVPP) Is an adsorbent that removes tannins, polyphenols, and oxides. These include many of your more red colors. Activated Carbon helps grab any remaining chlorophyll and allows the PVPP to flow better since it is an extremely fine powder prone to clogging. I generally blend even volumes of both powders before packing, no one sells this pre-blended that I know of.

Activated Bleaching Earth
I buy my activated bleaching earth from Anovia Group. It’s the best bleaching earth I’ve had the pleasure of using and priced very competitively. It has worked better for color remediation than t-5 or t-41 and is much cheaper. The activated bleaching earth is the final filtration media and is used last when all impurities have been removed and you are just trying to lighten the color of your extract and remove any remaining pigments.

A7 Proprietary Media
This is a media a friend developed and is beginning to sell. I had the pleasure of testing this for him and loved it. This media is optional and would be the final step if you choose to use it. This is a good adsorbent treated with a lewis acid. The lewis acid helps convert CBD to CBN. The use for this media is for people who are going for ultimate thc purity on the first pass. By converting CBD to CBN it allows the CBN to be distilled into the tail fraction instead of the main body, which gives you a higher thc purity.

Celite 545/Diatomaceous Earth
Simple filter aid that keeps your media from clogging your filter papers or sintered filter

Calculating ratios:
The best way to calculate ratios is to estimate how much-finished oil your material will produce. Weight of material being processed multiplied by the percentage of cannabinoids available. For example, a ten-pound run of material (4480 Grams) containing ten percent cannabinoids would produce an estimated 448 grams (4480*0.1). From this estimated yield we can calculate how much media to use without over or under saturating the adsorbents.

Magnesium Silicate
For BHO
Fresh material 40% of estimated yield
Old material 55-60% of estimated yield

For EHO
Fresh material 60-65% of estimated yield
Old material 80-85% of estimated yield

For HHO(hexane) extracted at room temp
Fresh material 80% of estimated yield
Old Material 100% of estimated yield

Silica Gel
For BHO
Fresh material 20-25% of estimated yield
Old material 40-50% of estimated yield

For EHO
Fresh material 40-50% of estimated yield
Old material 60-80% of estimated yield

For HHO
Fresh Material 200% estimated yield
Old Material 300-400% estimated yield

50/50 PVPP/Activated Carbon
For BHO
Fresh material 40% of estimated yield
Old material 60-70% of estimated yield

For EHO
Fresh material 80% of estimated yield
Old material 120-150% estimated yield

For HHO
Fresh material 50% of estimated yield
Old material 80% of estimated yield

Activated Bleaching Earth
For BHO
Fresh material 10% of estimated yield
Old material 25% of estimate yield

For EHO
Fresh Material 15% of estimated yield
Old material 30% of estimated yield

For HHO
Fresh material 5-10% of estimated yield
Old material 20-25% of estimated yield

A7 media
For BHO
Fresh material 2% of estimated yield
Old material 5% of estimated yield

For EHO
Fresh material 5% of estimated yield
Old material 10% of estimated yield

For HHO
Fresh material 2% of estimated yield
Old material 5% of estimated yield

Now that you’ve done your calculations and written down how much media you need based on your application its time to build your filter stack

Flow Considerations
How fast you’d like to complete a cycle and how much material you are running per cycle will decide the width of your filter column. In my experiments with 10-pound runs, a single six-inch column sufficed and allowed me to complete a cycle in two hours. A simple way I’ve found to estimate the necessary column width is to start with 10 pounds being a 6-inch column and every time the weight doubles add 2 inches to the filter width, so for a 20 lb cycle an 8-inch column would be good, for a 40 lb cycle you would want a 10-inch column, and for an 80-pound cycle, you would want a 12-inch column.

Packing the column
Packing your column correctly is mandatory. An incorrectly packed column will have channelling and improper flow. Improper flow means improper adsorption by the media. To pack my columns I set up the filter plate either with a 5um bottom paper and a 25um top paper or with a 4um sintered filter depending what is available to me. I then put a reducer on the bottom of the filter plate and the spool on top and attach it to a vacuum. I slowly add media while tapping the sides of the spool very hard with a 1 pound rubber mallet. I then use a flat cap to pack the layer down as flat as possible. Then I use a mesh screen with a drop-in filter plate on top of the layer to press it with a hydraulic press and make it completely flat and even. I have had success without the press, just using the vacuum, many times but there was still the occasional channelling, since using the press I haven’t had any channelling issues. Slowly and carefully remove the drop-in filter plate and mesh screen, as not to disturb the layer, and start on your next media following the exact same procedure. It should be packed in this order first to last, bottom to top: Celite/DE is your first and bottom layer always so you don’t get clogs. Next layer would be A7 media if you choose to use it. After that would be your Activated Bleaching Earth. Next is your 50/50 PVPP/AC blend. After that Silica Gel, and the final and top layer is your magnesium silicate. I always cover my last layer with a filter paper and ring so that the solution doesn’t disturb the layering when you open your valves. You want a valve at the bottom and the top of your filter stack.

The Process
Now we’re to the fun part, extracting the material. All BHO and EHO extractions were done at cryogenic temperatures. -60c or lower. HHO(Hexane) extractions were done at ambient temperatures around 70f. You will need two collection bases with at least one jacketed for this process. Your system should be hooked up Material Colums>Jacketed Collection Base>Filter Stack>Collection Base>Recovery System. Blast material normally into your first collection base. If using Butane or Ethanol, run 26-30c thermal transfer fluid through your jacket until the solution reaches the same temperature as the jacket. One solution is ambient temperature slowly open the valve at the bottom of your collection base and the valve at the top of your filter stack. Leave the bottom valve on the filter stack closed. Wait about ten to fifteen minutes for the solution to slowly evenly and fully permeate all layers of the filter stack. Once all layers have been permeated turn on your recovery system and open the valve to your second collection base, then slowly open the valve at the bottom of the filter stack about halfway. you need to choke the flow at the bottom side of the filter stack to help avoid channelling. One thing that is a bit wasteful but gives me great success when using butane is setting the blowoff valve on the first collection base to 20 psi so there isn’t as much back pressure to create channels, but this does waste quite a few pounds of solvent. Using hexane or ethanol just don’t pressurize over 20 psi with your nitrogen. Recover all your solvent and either throw it in the vacuum oven or go straight to distillation. Using the right ratios of magnesium silicate and silica gel will take winterization completely out of the picture.