Marijuana oils are sometimes made with solvents plus sometimes with pressure plus heat

I should have taken chemistry in high college, but I had an irreconcilable dispute with a professor that would allow me to take an exam on a weird day so I could attend my own father’s funeral.

  • And it’s not prefer I wanted to take the exam after everyone else so I could ask them what questions to study for, as I had suggested taking it a day early.

I switched out of chemistry plus went right into physics instead. It was a lot of fun taking physics with a professor that enjoyed to do everything from make small explosions to creating air cannons out of large PVC pipes. He also had a van der graaf generator that he would put out on display a few times throughout the semester. But to be honest, I don’t actually suppose about much of the stuff any more. In all honesty, I am more interested in chemistry these days than physics. I am a marijuana enthusiast plus that gives me some interest in botany, but more so with chemistry. The reason is the extraction process to produce marijuana concentrate oil. There are some extraction processes that use solvents prefer carbon dioxide, ethanol, butane, or propane, plus then there are chemical-free extraction processes that use high pressure plus heat prefer rosin. My neighbor works in the extraction lab at my favorite cannabis company in my apartment state plus he’s consistently telling me about the machines they use plus the rosin press that he primarily works with. If I had taken chemistry, perhaps I could have joined the marijuana industry at some point.

medical marijuana products

Similar Posts