CBD Extraction Methods: How to Make CBD Oil?
[et_pb_section bb_built="1"][et_pb_row][et_pb_column type="4_4"][et_pb_text _builder_version="3.0.105" background_layout="light"]
CBD is the acronym that is seemingly on everybody’s lips (and in blog posts) these days. Yet, most of the members of the public are not familiar with the history behind its isolation from the cannabis plant, and the processes that go into obtaining the concentrated form that is available for purchase.
As is the case with many aspects in life and business, there is no single route to the desired effect, and there are numerous ways for extracting cannabidiol from the variants of cannabis, each method has its advantages and disadvantages.
In this article, we will consider the most widely used extraction techniques – from the user-friendly and home-oriented procedures inspired by Rick Simpson for his full spectrum cannabis oil to methods that are only suitable for industrial-scale facilities. We will approach the subject in a chronological fashion, by taking a look at how cannabidiol and cannabis concentrates were obtained in the industry’s infancy, and how that changed into the multifaceted methods of today. Firstly though, we should clarify the jargon.
Concentrates and Solvents
Plant concentrates have existed since ancient times, with the first such products being the result of purposeful dehydration. Compared to the raw vegetal material, concentrates have distinct advantages: a more pronounced effect, a better resistance to natural degradation, easier transportation, etc. In the case of cannabis, the above statement is also true, with hashish being a rudimentary concentrate of cannabis. It seems that the term originated in writing around the 11th century AD, meaning that the practice of making hashish from a mixture of the female plant’s trichomes, leaves, and flower buds is without doubt much older than that. With the advent of modern chemistry, obtaining plant concentrates became a more sophisticated process, yielding higher concentrations from lower quantities of raw material. Across the last couple of centuries, a large number of techniques have been used, yet only a handful have proved their worth from both a scientific and economic point of view. The current popularity of cannabis concentrates has two main causes – a scientific one and an ethical one. Using a chemical extraction process is the only manner in which certain cannabinoids can be fully singled out in the end product because the average cannabis plant has more than one hundred such biochemical compounds. This is how one obtains THC oils and edibles (products containing predominantly tetrahydrocannabinol), CBD products or other cannabinoid concentrates, though the aforementioned largely overshadow the others. Obviously, the cannabinoid make-up of the plant providing the raw material for the concentrate is also of vital importance. Secondly, one must also take into account the social stigma associated with cannabis consumption. While the idea that cannabis and cannabinoids may have substantial medical applications, how they are delivered into the system is still a subject of heated debate. As smoking and injecting are definitely frowned upon, ingestion of edibles and oils is much more socially acceptable, being deemed even harmless by more and more categories of the public. Simply put, the concentrate is a (more or less) liquid solution extracted from the solid plant material. Broadly speaking, the extraction can be achieved with or without using solvents (substances that have the property of dissolving the initial solid, and then removed from the concoction, typically by through evaporation). Extraction techniques that involve solvents usually yield a product that is less dense (compared to the solventless methods), yet that can be addressed through further filtering if the oily texture was not the goal from the beginning. Throughout the extraction process, the end-product is chiefly dependent on the quality of the plant material and the method of extraction. The same quality product may be obtained in any way, however, each method has its advantages and disadvantages. As cannabis was not the first plant subjected to chemical extraction of concentrates, it is important to state that the process originates in other applications of agro-industrial chemistry. These techniques were first used on a small scale by scientists studying cannabis, cannabinoids and the endocannabinoid system in the sixties and seventies.The Generic Cannabinoid Extraction Method
As social, economic, and medical attitudes toward cannabis slowly changed at the end of the 20th century, several companies moved towards devising a larger-scale production method for cannabinoid concentrates. One such company, a Canadian outfit by the name of Websar Innovations patented one of the most influential early extraction methods, in the 1990’s.((https://www.google.com/patents/US6403126)) The patent mentioned above describes a straightforward sequence in which either full spectrum cannabinoid oil can be obtained from the cannabis plant – in this situation industrial hemp was used due to obvious legal considerations – which can be further filtered and separated into specific cannabinoid concentrates, according to the preferences of the user. Cannabinoid concentrates are best derived from the chaff od the cannabis plant, with the two following conceptions: still, green chaff to incorporate a quantity of chlorophyll and terpenes which supposedly enhance the effects of cannabinoids, or dried and ground chaff to limit the presence of compounds other than cannabinoids in the end-product. The chaff remains, whether green or dried, are then transformed into an extract with the aid of a solvent. The solvents may be any of the following types of organic substances: [custom_list type="check"]- A weight alcohol – in the quasi-totality of cases ethanol is used due to its availability and the lower risks compared to methanol, for example.
- A chlorinated hydrocarbon – compounds in this category include dichloromethane or chloroform. As one might imagine, this is a method that is not recommended as these chlorinated hydrocarbons are notoriously volatile and dangerous for direct human manipulation.
- A petroleum hydrocarbon – a whole range of substances, including butane and toluene.
- A supercritical fluid.
- Subcritical