Practical LSD
Manufacture
by Uncle
Fester
Loompanics Unlimited Port
Townsend, Washington
This book is sold for information purposes only. Neither the
author nor the publisher will be held accountable for the use or
misuse of the information contained in this book.
Practical LSD Manufacture
© 1995 by Uncle Fester
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or
stored in any form whatsoever without the prior written consent of
the publisher. Reviews may quote brief passages without the
written consent of the publisher as long as proper credit is
given.
Published by:
Loompanics Unlimited
PO Box 1197
Port Townsend, WA 98368
Loompanics Unlimited is a division of Loompanics Enterprises, Inc.
Cover design by Shaun Hayes-Holgate Illustrations by
John Megahan/The Technical Sketch and Kevin Martin
ISBN 1-55950-123-5
Library of Congress Card Catalog 95-75543
Contents
Preface..................................................................................................!
1. LSD Production: An Overview................................................... 1
2. Sources Of The Lysergic Amides.............................................. 5
3. Extraction And Isolation Of
The Lysergic Acid Amides ................................................15
4. LSD Directly From The Lysergic Amides —
The One Pot Shot...............................................................23
5. Lysergic Acid ...........................................................................41
6. LSD From Lysergic Acid And SO3..........................................47
7. LSD From Lysergic Acid And
Trifluoroacetic Anhydride..................................................57
8. LSD From Lysergic Acid And Phosgene ................................61
9. Method X .................................................................................65
10. Solvent Management ...............................................................69
11. Keeping Out Of Trouble..........................................................71
12. Studies On The Production Of TMA-2 ...................................77
Appendix
Know Your Essential Oils ...........................................................97
Precursor And Essential Chemicals.............................................99
Waste Exchanges....................................................................... 101
Distributors................................................................................. 105
Love Letters From The Heat...................................................... 107
A Few Words Concerning Calamus by Cousin
Lester..................................................................... 113
Preface
Preface
The DBA has recently estimated the total number of
clandestine LSD labs operating in the United States at only 100,
with most of them located in northern California. This
alarmingly low number of labs leaves the supply of LSD in this
country at constant peril. Further, the concentration of
production in so few hands has left us awash in a mediocre
swill comparable to the beer spewed out by the major brewers.
This distressing situation results from the convergence of a
series of factors. The botanical sources of lysergic acid are not
easily available in large quantities. The actual production of
LSD from these botanical sources is a touchy and involved
operation. These roadblocks, however, pale in comparison to
the most important factor — the inaccessibility of good
information to those motivated to put it into action.
I can think of no other area of organic chemistry which, to
we common working pot-boilers, is shrouded in as much
mystery, or is as thoroughly obfuscated as the production of
LSD. The scientific articles dealing with this topic are barely
readable by the typical person with an undergraduate degree in
chemistry. They assume a level of understanding of the arcane
Practical LSD Manufacture
field of lysergic chemistry not generally possessed by even
those skilled in the "cooking arts."
The "underground publications" covering this topic have
done little to clean up this situation. They have merely
regurgitated the original unintelligible works until they have
become like mantras, repeatedly chanted and not understood.
It is here that this book shall break new ground. Rather than
presenting this field as a magic act, the sources of lysergic acid
raw materials in nature shall be detailed, and their mystery
removed. The processes required to isolate this raw material
and move it on in pure form to LSD shall be expounded upon.
Common threads shall be drawn between the various
procedures to show what variations in technique are acceptable,
and which produce the disappointing commercial product we
are all too often cursed with.
A special added feature of this book will be the result of my
own investigations into the production of the most wonderful
psychedelic: TMA-2, derived form the roots of the calamus
plant. For those unable or unwilling to wade through the
difficulties that attend cultivating ergot, or growing crops of
morning glories, digging up the roots of this common plant
offers a most convenient and low-profile route to an aweinspiring
substance. You will be quite pleased, I'm sure.
Fester
7 LSD Production: An
Overview
1
1
LSD Production:
An Overview
The synthesis of LSD is not a task to be undertaken lightly by the
novice wannabe drug chemist. It requires a level of skill roughly
double that needed to produce more conventional drugs such as
methamphetamine. A person contemplating this task should be well
trained prior to beginning the attempt, as learning while "on the job" is
likely to lead not only to failure, but also the probable poisoning of the
said wannabe drug chemist.
This fact of life is due to both the nature of the product itself, and
the involved procedures required to convert ergot, morning glory
seeds, or Hawaiian baby woodrose seeds into LSD. The potency of
LSD is truly phenomenal — 10,000 doses per gram — and is easily
absorbed through the skin. This is how Albert Hofmann, the
discoverer of LSD, got his first trip. He was skilled enough that his
boo-boo involved a small enough dose that his brain was not fried.
Beginner chemists tend to get the stuff they are cooking all over
themselves, and would not be so lucky.
Lysergic acid, its precursors, and LSD are all very fragile
molecules, and quite prone to destruction by light, air and heat. The
common makeshift basement lab set-ups used by most clandestine
operators will not do for anyone contemplating LSD synthesis. Real
laboratory equipment is needed, such as a distilling kit with ground
Practical LSD Manufacture
glass joints for doing reactions in, and for distilling home synthesized
reagents to an acceptable degree of purity. A vacuum desiccator is
essential to dry lysergic compounds without burning them. A vacuum
pump rather than an aspirator is the only acceptable source of vacuum
for this desiccator. One must be prepared to spend about $5000 up
front to equip such a lab, but the paybacks are potentially enormous if
one avoids detection. See my Third Edition of Secrets of
Methamphetamine Manufacture for many useful tips on how to obtain
chemicals and equipment, set up shop and move the product without
getting caught. The wise operator will never pass up the opportunity to
use the five-finger-discount method, industry contacts, waste
exchanges and the surplus market to stock his or her lab.
The minimum level of skill I would trust to undertake this task
would be at least a full year of college organic chemistry lab, and a
few biology courses with lab where the use of chromatography was
taught to isolate biological substances from complex mixtures. Sterile
culture technique in these biology classes is a real plus if the plan is to
cultivate ergot in a rye field. Long gone are the days when a guy like
Owsley, with only a little training and a smart wife, could buy pure
ergotamine tartarate and all the other chemicals needed to brew
legendary acids like White Lightning and Orange Sunshine. Today's
operator must be prepared to isolate lysergic acid precursors from
materials like ergot, morning glory seeds, or Hawaiian baby woodrose
seeds. He must also be ready and able to synthesize in pure form
closely watched organic reagents like diethylamine.
There is a constant and unyielding maxim in organic chemistry:
GIGO — garbage in, garbage out. If the materials used in an organic
synthesis are not pure to a reasonable degree, the result is a complex
mixture in which the desired product comprises only a small
proportion. Even a seemingly very simple reaction cannot escape this
law. Case in point is the hydriodic acid and red phosphorus reduction of
ephedrine to methamphetamine. If in this reaction the ephedrine is not
fairly free of the fillers and binders found in the stimulant pills from
which it is extracted, the result at the end of the reaction is a heavy
reduction in the yield of product, and the formation of a most stubborn
emulsion from which the desired meth is extracted only with
1
LSD Production: An Overview
great difficulty. This is the origin of the revolting peanut butter
consistency of most meth seen on the market. Similarly, one can only
expect success in the production of high-grade LSD if care is taken
throughout the procedure to ensure that the materials used meet the
requirement of a reasonable degree of purity.
The actual synthesis of LSD is an exquisite combination of
farming skills, biology, biochemistry and organic chemistry. In its
preferred embodiment, a scheme for the large-scale manufacture of
LSD would center around someone playing weekend hobby farmer on an
acre or two of land. On this land, our happier-than-most farmer
would plant either rye to be infested with the Claviceps fungus to
produce a crop of ergot; morning glories for the eventual harvest of
their seeds; or, if local weather conditions permit, Hawaiian baby
woodrose, also for the harvest of its seeds.
Mother Nature's bounty is then squirreled off to the lab site for
the biochemical phase of the process — the isolation of the lysergic
alkaloids. Here one or more of a series of alkaloids are freed from the
very complex plant matrix and hopefully isolated in a pure form.
These alkaloids all have one thing in common — they are amides of
lysergic acid. See the structures of the major naturally occurring
amides pictured below:
Practical LSD Manufacture
4
They all contain the lysergic acid molecule shown below:
The lysergic acid molecule is the key to all known methods of
LSD production. The common thread that all the synthetic routes to
LSD share is that the path they travel starts with the naturally
occurring alkaloids, the amide linkage is lopped off to give lysergic
acid, and then the lysergic acid is reacted with diethylamine to give
LSD shown below:
The nuts and bolts of how this is done will be explained in the
succeeding chapters.
2 Sources Of The Lysergic Amides
2
Sources Of The
Lysergic Amides
Let me begin this chapter by nuking an oft-chanted mantra, this
mantra being the claim that a person can grow ergot fungus in a
culture medium and get it to produce lysergic acid amides to feed into
LSD production. This claim as seen in Psychedelic Chemistry and
other publications I read while in college is pure BS. It is truly
unfortunate that nature does not cooperate in this manner, since this
would obviously be the best way to set up a large-scale production
operation, as the logistical complications of crop growth and harvest
would then be eliminated.
Let me give a science and literature reading lesson to those who
have made these claims. See Proceedings of the Royal Society of
London, Series B, Volume 155, pages 26 to 54 (1961). Also see US
Patent 3,219,545. You will note while reading these articles detailing
how to get lysergic amide production in a culture medium that these
guys had to scour the globe to find that rare strain of claviceps fungus
that will cooperate in this manner. The vast majority of claviceps
fungi just will not produce these alkaloids while being cultured. See
the following articles to convince yourself of just how futile it is to
collect a wild strain of claviceps and try to get it to produce lysergic
acid amides in culture: Ann. Rep. Takeda Res. Lab Volume 10, page 73
(1951); and Farmco, Volume 1, page 1 (1946); also Arch. Pharm. Berl.
Volume 273, page 348 (1935); also American Journal of
Practical LSD Manufacture
Botany, Volume 18, page 50 (1931); also Journal of the American
Pharmacy Association Volume 40, page 434 (1951); also US patent
2,809,920; also Canadian Journal of Microbiology, Volume 3, page
55 (1957), and Volume 4, page 611 (195

and Volume 6, page 355
(1960); also Journal of the American Pharmacy Society Volume 44,
page 736 (1955).
With this matter disposed of, it is time to move on to what
actually are viable sources of lysergic acid amides for the production of
LSD. This is the farming end of the acid business. It is only through
raising ergot-infested rye, or growing morning glories and Hawaiian
baby woodrose that the required feedstocks of lysergic compounds
can be obtained without making a target of oneself. I have for years
seen ads in High Times offering morning glory seeds and Hawaiian
baby woodrose seeds for sale, but these are offered in small amounts at
high prices. I would bet my bottom dollar that these outfits, if they are
not front operations, will at least report to the heat any large orders they
get. To avoid detection, the aspiring LSD manufacturer must be ready
to get his hands dirty, and spend some time as a farmer.
The most difficult farming choice, and as luck would have it, the
one that gives the purest acid, is to grow a patch of ergot-infested rye.
The reason why ergot is superior to growing morning glory seeds or
woodrose seeds is that these seeds have a considerable amount of
another type of alkaloid in them besides the ones that yield lysergic
acid. These other alkaloids are of the clavine type, meaning that they
have the lysergic-acid skeleton, but lack the carboxyl grouping. In its
place will be a methyl grouping, an alcohol grouping, a methyl
alcohol grouping or combinations of the above. These clavine
alkaloids will likely be carried all the way through into the product,
producing both the GIGO situation during the synthetic operations
and a contaminated product when finished. I will present my ideas on
how to remove them, but they are best avoided in the first place.
Ergot is the name given to a dark brown to purplish black hornshaped
growth occasionally seen nestled amongst the healthy grains in
the head of the rye plant. It is typically in the neighborhood of 10 to 15
mm long, and can reach diameters of about 5 mm. The ergot
consists of tightly interwoven hyphae of the fungus Claviceps
2 Sources Of The Lysergic Amides
purpurea, and it grows parasitically upon the rye plant. During the
Middle Ages, when ergot infested rye was quite common, great
poisoning epidemics called St. Anthony's Fire or ignis sacer would
break out among the people who ate it. For some reason that escapes
me, they never, over the course of hundreds of years, connected this
most lamentable malady to eating the ergot infesting their rye. The
usual response to an outbreak was to burn a witch or two in the hope
that this display of piety would so please God that they would be
saved.
A most wonderful book has been written on the topic of ergot, and
upon the history of these mass poisoning outbreaks. The book is titled
Ergot and Ergotism by G. Barger, and it is absolute must reading for
anyone seriously contemplating growing ergot. In this book you will
find a series of pictures of ergot growing on rye in the wild, and a
much more detailed presentation of both the chemistry of ergot and its
life cycle than will be given here.
You may well have noticed that outbreaks of ergot poisoning are no
longer commonplace. This is mostly because modem farming
practices such as plowing, crop rotation, drainage of fields and the use of
fungus-resistant seed strains make the present day crop of rye a
much less hospitable place for the ergot to grow in than the sloppily
run dumps that our peasant ancestors presided over. Yet, the
occasional head of ergot is still there to be found in fields of rye, and a
field trip to a patch of rye to gather some ergot is the necessary first
step of purposely growing your own patch of rye just overrun with
ergot. Such field trips are made considerably easier thanks to the fact
that wild ergot on a modern farm will be mostly growing around the
edges of the field. There is no need to run all over the farmer's rye,
and cause him to want to ventilate you for trampling his crop.
When a few dozen heads of wild ergot have been collected, the
stage is set for you to begin growing truly worthwhile crops of ergot
rather than the pitiful scattered kernel or two found on your typical
farm. To get these bountiful yields of ergot, biological skills will be
called upon to get an infestation rate in your own crop of rye that far
exceeds that seen in even the most slovenly days of Dark Ages
serfdom.
Practical LSD Manufacture
8
To grow ergot successfully, one must have some knowledge of the
life cycle of the Claviceps fungus. The kernel of ergot seen growing
on the rye plant is the form this fungus takes to make it through the
winter. In the wild state, the ergot falls off of the rye plant when the
grain matures, and lays there on top of the dirt until the following
spring. Then, when warm weather returns, the kernel of ergot sprouts
off a bunch of tiny growths that look for all the world like so many
minute mushrooms. In the head of each of these little mushroom
growths are millions of spores. These spores are the fungus equivalent of
seeds.
When the mushroom growths have reached a length of about 20
mm, they are mature, and the head of the mushroom explodes,
sending the millions of spores floating through the air. These spores,
either by luck of air currents or by hitching a ride upon insects, find
their way into the flower of the rye plants growing nearby. The flower of
the rye plant is nothing spectacular. Rye is a grass, and its flowers look
like most other grass flowers — just a filamentaceous dab of color
scattered over the head of the plant which soon grows into seeds.
Upon being deposited into the flower of the rye plant, the spore
germinates and takes over the flower. The fungus then grows by
sucking nutrients out of the rye plant, until a new kernel of ergot has
been formed to repeat the process again next year.
The biological sciences are made to order to take the hit-and-miss
aspect out of the process of rye flower infestation. Instead of the
random action of air currents or insects to bring spores into contact
with their new home, one may germinate these spores in a sterile
culture medium, grow them until they have multiplied a million-fold,
then spray them onto the rye plants just as they are blooming to ensure a
heavy infestation with ergot. This method has been in use since the
1920s with great success in the commercial production of ergot. See
the reference by Hecke (pages 1921-1922) in the back of the Ergot
and Ergotism book mentioned above for complete experimental
details. Yields of ergot using this method average a few hundred
pounds per acre. A couple of acres could supply most of the United
States with high-grade acid.
2 Sources Of The Lysergic Amides
To put this plan into action, the few dozen kernels of ergot are kept
cool and dry during the winter, then as spring approaches they are made
ready to germinate by putting them in the refrigerator for one month to
six weeks with the temperature held steady from just above freezing to
3° C. This will make the ergot think that it has gone through winter, and
works better than actually freezing the stuff. Without this treatment, the
ergot will not germinate to form the mushroom stage of its life cycle.
After our artificial winter has passed for the ergot, we must make it
think that it is at home in the dirt. To do this, a terrarium is thoroughly
cleaned out with bleach water and several rinses. Then a layer of clean
sand about an inch thick is put in the bottom of the terrarium, and the
ergot is sprinkled on top of the sand. Finally, a little more sand is
sprinkled over the top of the ergot until they are each just covered up.
The terrarium is kept at room temperature, with an occasional misting
with water to keep the sand moist but not soaking wet.
After about a month in the terrarium, the ergot begins to sprout. In
the case of ergot, sprout means to grow a bunch of the little mushrooms
mentioned before. They grow towards the light, starting out short and
fat, and becoming increasingly thin as they grow. The heads of these
mushrooms will be covered with what appear to be warts when they are
ripe. Misting with water must be continued during the sprouting of the
ergot to keep it growing.
When the mushrooms sprouting from a particular grain of ergot are
ripe, they should be harvested. The individual grains will not all sprout
or ripen at the same time, so this is a harvest one-grain-at-a-time
operation. The ripe grain is carefully scooped out of the sand with a
spoon, and the sand is then dilute-bleach-water-misted away to leave the
bare grain covered with mushrooms. Care must be taken when handling
the sprouted ergot, as rough handling will cause the ripe heads of the
mushrooms to explode and spew forth their load of spores.
From this point onward, best results are going to be had using
sterile-culture technique. The next objective is to remove the spores
from the heads of the mushrooms growing out of the ergot, and put
Practical LSD Manufacture
10
them into a sterile culture medium made from diluted malt extract,
where they will grow for a week or so producing a culture broth
loaded with germinated spores which can be sprayed onto the
blooming heads of rye, yielding a heavy infection rate of ergot in your
patch of rye.
I have some helpful observations to share on the matter of home
sterile-culture technique, based upon my own experiences. It has been
my observation that keeping one's cultures free from contamination by
freeloading wild germs is often considerably more difficult in the
kitchen than it is in a biology lab. The typical university lab is
supplied with filtered air from the central heating and air conditioning
unit. The amount of dust particles and animal dander floating in the
air is much smaller than usually seen in the home. This is especially
true if your housekeeping is bad, like mine. The threat from wild
contamination is most severe if you live in a warm, moist area, like the
eastern half of the US in the summer. When doing home cultures, the
sterile transfers should be done in an air-conditioned room with an
effective air filter.
To begin the sterile culture portion of ergot farming, a series of
2000 ml conical flasks are filled about one inch deep with nutrient
broth made by diluting malt extract with 5 volumes of water. Malt
extract is found at stores and outlets catering to the home brewer. It
comes in cans, and is a very thick liquid. Avoid the crystalline version of
malt extract. The tops of the conical flasks are loosely plugged with
cotton, and then sterilized in a pressure cooker at 15 Ibs. pressure for a
little over l/2 hour.
When they have cooled down to room temperature they are moved
into the room in which the sterile transfers will be done. The spores
from the heads of the mushrooms are sterilely transferred into these
flasks for growth. This is done by taking a microscope slide cover slip,
and while holding it with a tweezers, passing the cover slip through
the flame of an alcohol lamp. Then, when the cover slip has cooled
down, it is impregnated with spores by holding the cover slip over the
head of a mushroom with a sterilized tweezer and lancing the
mushroom head with a similarly sterilized needle. Remember that the
heads of these mushrooms are ready to explode when ripe. The spore2
Sources Of The Lysergic Amides
11
impregnated cover slip is then dropped into the conical flask, and the
cotton plug replaced. In this manner, a whole series of flasks can be
seeded with Claviceps fungus from a single ergot grain.
The spores germinate shortly after landing in the nutrient broth.
From there they grow into a slimy film floating on the surface of the
broth. The best growth is obtained at a temperature of 25-30° C. This
fungus needs oxygen to grow, but a few days of growth in the 2000 ml
flask will not exhaust the supply there. Longer periods of incubation
would require that some fresh oxygen be supplied to the flasks.
Best results are obtained when the fungus is actively growing
when it is sprayed onto the rye plants. This means that the whole ergot
sprouting and culturing operation must be timed to coincide with the
flowering of the rye plants. In my own state of Wisconsin, the rye
comes into bloom in early to mid-June, depending upon the weather.
The blooming of rye lasts for about a week, so timing is critical. It is
possible to spray a little before the onset of blooming, but spraying too
late is mostly a waste of time.
The spraying is a very simple operation. A metal or plastic hand
pump sprayer with a capacity of about 3 gallons is filled about half
full of water. The contents of one of those conical culture flasks are
then put into the sprayer, and mixed around thoroughly by shaking.
Then more water is added to fill the sprayer, and the solution is then
sprayed onto the crop. This is best done early in the morning, while
dew is still on the plants. The aim should be to get a fairly light
misting over the entire crop. This can be repeated every day for the
week that the rye is in bloom.
From here nature takes over, producing kernels of ergot identical to
the ones harvested the year before. There is general agreement that the
most potent ergot grows during very hot summers. No farmer has
control of the weather, but if there is a choice as to where our ergot
farmer sets up shop, it would then be best to choose a state with very
hot summers, or at least the southward-facing slope of a hill. It is also
generally agreed that the ergot is at its most potent about a week or so
before the rye grain are fully ripe. This is when the rye crop should be
harvested.
Practical LSD Manufacture
12
The harvesting of the rye (ergot) crop should not be done with a
combine, as these machines pass the grains through a sieve. Most of
the ergot would then be lost, as it is much larger than the rye kernels.
Rather, the rye plants should be cut down using a hand or mechanical
sickle, and they should then be gathered up into shocks as seen in old
time pictures or paintings of grain harvesting. Next, the grains should be
beaten off the rye plants into a container such as a bushel basket. We
are talking about old time farming here! The ergot is then
separated from the rye kernels by dumping the bushel basket full of
grain into a tank full of saturated salt solution in water. The ergot
floats to the top of the salt water, while the rye sinks. The ergot is
skimmed off the top of the water, rinsed, and immediately spread out to
dry in the sun. The ergot must not be allowed to get moldy, as this ruins
its potency.
This procedure is the preferred source for the lysergic acid
amides. It is preferable both to growing morning glory seeds and
Hawaiian baby woodrose seeds because the alkaloid content of the
ergot is about 10 times higher, and also because the ergot has very
small amounts of the clavine alkaloids contaminating it. The case can be
made that the simplicity of the seed growing operations as
compared to growing ergot argues in favor of using that method. My
thoughts on this matter are that ergot is needed for really high quality
acid, and that if a person wants an easy drug to make, he should check
out my recipe for Cat in the third edition of Secrets Of
Methamphetamine Manufacture.
There is an excellent alternative source of ergot for those living
close to the Gulf coast, the Atlantic coast south of New York, and the
Pacific Northwest's Puget Sound. In the saltwater marshes along the
coast, the marsh grass Spartina is subject to a very heavy infestation
with wild ergot. Yields of wild ergot in the range of 150 pounds per
acre are pretty common in areas that have been disturbed, such as by
ditches or in "spoil areas." (See Mycologia, Volume 66, pages 978 to
986 (1974) for full details and pictures.) Harvesting the ergot in this
case would probably be best done in a manner similar to that used by
Native Americans to harvest wild rice. They simply travel through the
2 Sources Of The Lysergic Amides
13
grass in a shallow-draft rowboat, bend the heads of grain into their
boats, and beat it off with a stick.
If the choice is made to fuel LSD production using morning glory
seeds, one should be aware that not all varieties are created equal.
Some types of morning glories contain little or no ergot alkaloids. The
best varieties to choose are Heavenly Blues, Pearly Gates or Flying
Saucers. The only growing tips I have to share are to give the plants a
moderate dose of nitrogen fertilizer when they are young to encourage
heavy growth, then switch to organic fertilizers so as not to mess up
the plant's hormonal balance during flowering and seed production.
There have been recent reports of a wholly new source of lysergic
acid amides. The so called Sleepy Grass (Stipa robusta) of the desert
areas of the American West is reported to have an alkaloid content
approaching that of ergot, and should be a good source of raw
material to feed into acid production. See Discover magazine, Dec.
92.
Additional Reading On Growing Ergot:
Gulf Res. Rep. 3(1), pages 105-109 (1970), "Observations on
Claviceps purpurea on Spartina alterflora." Canadian Journal of
Botany Vol. 35, pages 315-320 (1957), "Studies
on Ergot in Gramineous Hosts." Pharmacognosy (1965), pages 321-
327. Agricultural Gazette of New South Wales Vol. 52, pages 571-
581
(1941), "Artificial Production of Ergot." Pythopathology Volume
35, pages 353-360 (1945), "The Field
Inoculation of Rye With Claviceps purpurea." American Journal of
Botany Volume 18, pages 50-78 (1931), "The
Reactions of Claviceps purpurea to Variations in Environment."
3
Extraction And Isolation Of
The Lysergic Acid Amides
15
3
Extraction And Isolation Of
Lysergic Acid Amides
After the harvest of the crops, the farming phase of acid
production is now over. This is a good news/bad news situation for
the acid chemist. The good news is that the voluminous pile of crop
will in short order be reduced in size to a quantity more conveniently
handled in the lab. For example, ergot typically contains from V* to
¥2% alkaloids by weight. A 200 pound harvest of ergot will, after
extraction, yield Vi to a full pound of lysergic acid amides. This
quantity is worth several millions of dollars if moved wholesale at a
dollar per dose. The yield from a similar amount of morning glory
seeds will be reduced by a factor of about 5, but still be substantial.
Hawaiian baby woodrose seeds are intermediate between the two.
The bad news takes several forms. A significant amount of
solvents will be needed to perform the extraction from the crop. It is at
this juncture that the acid chemist will need to employ industrial
contacts, theft, or the formation of a front operation to get the several
55-gallon drums of solvents needed to execute the extraction. The
aroma that solvents give off also precludes doing this procedure in a
residential neighborhood. A shed back on the farm site or a business
front setting is much more suitable.
It is also at this phase that the delicate natures of the lysergic
molecules express themselves. While they are locked up in ergot or in
seeds, these molecules are pretty stable, so long as the crop is kept
Practical LSD Manufacture
16
cool, dry, and free from mold. Once they are released, they are prey to
light, heat, air, and bad chemical handling. A clock begins to tick on
the shelf life of your product. Once the extraction is begun, the
chemist must consider himself committed to the task, and not allow
himself to be distracted by other matters while the product spoils.
There are several alternate procedures for the extraction of the
amides from ergot. They all produce roughly similar results. This is
fortunate, as it allows the acid chemist to choose the materials used
based upon availability rather than being rigidly locked into using a
certain set of materials.
The first step in the extraction procedure, regardless of whether
ergot or seeds are being extracted, is a thorough grinding. A blender is
suitable for this job, and a coffee grinder may work as well if it gives a
fine grind. Once the crop has been ground up, it is immediately
vulnerable to attack by light and air, so as soon as it is ground it
should be wetted with the solvent chosen for use in the next step:
defatting.
Defatting is a very important step in the isolation of pure alkaloid.
The fats and oils present in the crop must be removed because if they
were left in, a tenacious emulsion would form during the extraction of
the alkaloid, and you could forget about ever getting even close to a
pure amide extract. For all practical purposes, all that would be
extracted would be garbage.
Defatting can be done with any one of several very common and
easily available solvents. For a 200 pound crop, one can count on
using at least one, and possibly two 55 gallon drums of solvent. The
defatting can be done with either hexane, petroleum ether (not ethyl
ether) mineral spirits or naphtha. The preferred procedure for small
scale extractions is to put the ground-up, solvent-soaked crop into a
burette, and then keep dripping fresh solvent onto the top of the
material until the solvent coming out at the bottom of the burette does
not leave a grease stain on filter paper when the solvent dries. This is
easily scaled up for our 200 pound crop by replacing the burette with
clean pipes about 4 inches in diameter, and about 4 feet long, with
suitable valves and filters at the bottom to prevent everything from
falling out. (See Figure 1). When all the fats have been removed from
3
Extraction And Isolation Of
The Lysergic Acid Amides
17
the crop, the best procedure is to
evaporate the remaining defatting
solvent from the crop under a
vacuum. This is not practical for
a large crop, so letting the
remainder drip out of the bed
over a period of a few hours is
called for.
With the fats removed, the
ergot alkaloids can be extracted
from the crop. Note here the
word alkaloid. This is the key to
all variations of the extraction
procedure. There is a piperidine
nitrogen atom in the lysergic
portion of
these molecules that possesses
basic properties similar to ammonia and amines. This atom allows
the lysergic molecules to form salts with acids, and also causes the
solubility characteristics of the molecule to change depending upon
whether the molecule is in acid or basic solution. It further allows the
lysergic amides, including LSD, to form crystals from solution.
The lysergic amides as found in our crop are tied up in the plant
material in association with acidic substances. To get the amides to
extract out in a solvent, this salt must be free-based. There are two
preferred solvent and basing agent combinations. Choice number one is
used in the USP procedure. This combination is ammonia as the
free-basing agent in a solvent of chloroform. The other preferred
combination was used extensively in Europe. This combination used
MgO (magnesia) as the basing agent with a solvent of ethyl ether or
benzene. There have been comparisons of the two methods, and the
European variation gives an extraction that is about 25% more
complete than the USP method. It is, however, not nearly as practical
Cotton
Crop
Cotton over filter paper
Threaded cap and valve
Note use of copper brass or bronze
not allowed on any part'
Figure 1 Apparatus
for large-scale defatting
Practical LSD Manufacture
18
as the USP method for large-scale extractions because it would be
necessary to dump the crop out of the extraction pipes, and then grind
the solid MgO into an intimate mixture with the crop prior to
extraction with ether. The USP method allows the much simpler
procedure that follows:
The extraction solvent is made up by adding one-tenth gallon
strong ammonia (28% NH3OH; 56% NHtOH) to nine-tenths gallon
methanol. After mixing, this is added to nine gallons of chloroform to
give 10 gallons of extraction solvent. The use of methanol is
necessary because without it the ammonia does not mix into the
chloroform. Instead, it would float on top of the chloroform giving an
unhomogenous mixture.
The extraction is done by trickling this extraction solvent into the
top of the bed of crop, allowing it to flow downward through the crop,
and collecting the extract as it flows out the bottom of the pipe. This
extract must be protected from light to prevent its destruction. The
extraction of a 200 pound crop requires about 150 gallons of solvent.
One can monitor the extraction by catching a little bit of the solvent
coming out the bottom of the pipes in a watch glass, and shining a
black light upon it in a darkened room. The lysergic amides in the
crop fluoresce a bluish color. When this color no longer appears in the
extract, the extraction is complete.
Next, the approximately 150 gallons of solvent must be
evaporated down to a more convenient amount. If one's crop was not so
bountiful as 200 pounds, this is a lot simpler, and can be done in
laboratory glassware. For a large crop, a more industrial approach
must be taken. The two main precautions to prevent damage to the
product are the same in either case. The evaporation must be done
with a vacuum, so that the product is not exposed to heating above 40° C
(105° F), and the product must not be exposed to light.
To evaporate the large industrial quantity of solvent, a 55-gallon
steel drum is filled about two-thirds full of the extraction solvent. On
the top of the drum are two threaded openings. Opening number one is
secured with the original bung. The other opening is tightly stuffed with
a rubber stopper. This rubber stopper has a hole drilled in it, and a
section of pipe is put through the hole in the stopper so that it
3
Extraction And Isolation Of
The Lysergic Acid Amides
19
extends about an inch below the stopper. To this pipe, a line of
vacuum tubing is attached, leading to a vacuum pump. This pump
should be the typical shop pump that can pull a vacuum of about 21
inches of mercury out of the possible 30 inches. This is enough to
greatly speed the evaporation without causing the chloroform to boil.
Boiling may raise a head of foam that would carry product along with it,
causing great losses.
On a laboratory scale, a stronger vacuum can be used from an
aspirator. By using red or yellow darkroom light bulbs for
illumination, damage to the product can be kept to a minimum. The
stronger vacuum speeds up the process quite a bit. Use boiling chips to
prevent bumping.
As the chloroform evaporates away, more of the extraction solvent
may be added to either the 55-gallon drum or the distilling flask,
depending upon the scale of production. The evaporation is continued
until the extraction solvent has been reduced to one-fifteenth its
original volume. For the 200-pound crop, the 150 gallons of extraction
solvent has been reduced to 10 gallons.
An accessory which may speed up and smooth out this
evaporation is a capillary air bubbler. This is made by taking a section of
glass tubing, and poking it through a rubber stopper. The end of the
glass tubing is then heated to redness in a flame, and pulled into a
very fine capillary. The tubing is then stuck into the solution being
evaporated, extending nearly to the bottom. The vacuum will pull a
fine stream of air bubbles through the solution and aid evaporation.
When the chloroform has been reduced to one-fifteenth of its
original volume, it must be diluted with ether. The reason for this is
that the next step is extraction of the ergot alkaloids into a tartaric-acid
solution, and it has been found that this is very difficult from pure
chloroform. When the solution is predominantly ether, the transfer of
the alkaloids into the tartaric-acid solution can be done efficiently. For
the drum-sized batch, add 30 gallons of ether and two gallons of
alcohol. Similarly, for smaller batches add three volumes of ether and a
little alcohol.
At this point, an important matter must be addressed. This matter is
central snoopervision of chemical transactions. Note the "Love
Practical LSD Manufacture
20
Letters From The Heat" section at the end of this book concerning the
Chemical Diversion Trafficking Act of 1988, and its amendments
since then. This federal law requires chemical dealers to "identify
their customers, maintain retrievable records, and report suspicious
transactions" for a list of chemicals compiled at the end of this book.
Ether is on the mandatory snitch list in amounts above 25 gallons, and
you can take it to the bank that regular chemical outlets will be
following the letter of the law. You can also bet that connections met
through the waste exchanges are mostly concerned with getting the
stuff off their hands, not kissing up to the DBA. The serious
experimenter may wish to try substituting benzene for ether, since it is
not now on the mandatory snitch list.
The alkaloids are next extracted out of the ether solution into
decimolar (15 grams per liter) tartaric acid in water. The alkaloids
form a salt with the tartaric acid that is soluble in water, and leave the
extraneous plant compounds in the ether. This extraction should be
done four times with a volume of tartaric-acid solution that is oneseventh
the volume of the ether solution. For example, with about 40
gallons of ether solution in a drum, extract with about 6 gallons of
tartaric acid solution four times. This means a fresh six gallons on
each extraction. If a stubborn emulsion forms, the addition of a little
alcohol to the mix will break it.
Tartaric acid is the preferred acid for this extraction because the
tartaric acid salt of the alkaloids is relatively stable in light. A .2N
solution of sulfuric acid can be used instead if precautions are taken to
protect the solution from exposure to light. This method may be
preferable because it has become a hassle to buy tartaric acid.
Recently, at my place of work, I had occasion to order one pound of
Rochelle salts (potassium sodium tartarate) from a major chemical
supplier. This material was for use in a laboratory scale cyanide
copper plating bath, where the Rochelle salt acts as a complexor. To
get them to sell me this material, I had to answer a battery of
questions, in spite of the fact that the firm at which I work has had a
long customer relationship with this major chemical supplier. Less
scrutiny of tartaric acid purchases would likely be encountered from a
firm which supplies chemicals to the plating industry. To get tartaric
3
Extraction And Isolation Of
The Lysergic Acid Amides
21
acid from Rochelle salts, just dissolve them in water, and then add
hydrochloric acid until the pH of the decimolar solution reaches 2.
The tartaric-acid solution containing the alkaloids should now be
free-based, preferably with ammonia. The ammonia should be added
slowly with vigorous stirring until the pH of the solution reaches 8 to
8.5. A higher pH must be avoided, since at these pHs racemization to
the inactive iso form of lysergic occurs.
The free-based alkaloids can now be extracted out of the water
solution into ether. The extraction should be done four times, each
time with a volume of ether 1A that of the water solution. The
combined ether extracts should be dried over some magnesium sulfate
previously wetted with ether to prevent it from absorbing alkaloid
during the drying process.
Finally, the ether is evaporated away under a vacuum to yield a
residue of fairly pure alkaloids. The alkaloids in this form are very
fragile, and must be immediately transferred to a freezer for storage.
4
LSD Directly From The Lysergic Amides —
The One Pot Shot
23
4
LSD Directly From The
Lysergic Amides
— The One-Pot Shot
When the lysergic amides have been extracted in pure form from
the crop, work should begin without delay to convert it to LSD.
Diligence in this matter is very important because possession of the
extracted amides is strong evidence of intent to manufacture LSD.
Further, mere possession of lysergic acid or ergine is prohibited as
they are federal "controlled substances." The goal must be to get the
hot potato out of one's hands and convert it to cash as fast as possible.
There are several possible methods to follow in the conversion of
the lysergic amides to LSD. The first two presented in this book are
excellent, and highly recommended. The third one is OK. Beyond
that, we are talking last resort. In all cases, the overriding factor which
must take precedence is ease of availability of the required chemicals. A
bottle of trifluoroacetic anhydride in hand beats homemade
anhydrous hydrazine in the bush.
The first LSD manufacture method presented here is what I like to
call "the one-pot shot." It can be found in US patent 3,239,530 and
US patent 3,085,092, both granted to Albert Hofmann. This method
uses anhydrous hydrazine to cleave the ergot amides to produce
lysergic acid hydrazide. The hydrazide is then isolated by extraction,
Practical LSD Manufacture
24
and reacted with acetylacetone (2,4-pentanedione) to form a pyrazole
intermediate, which is then reacted with diethylamine to form LSD.
This method at first glance seems complicated, but the actual
manipulations involved here are less challenging than proceeding
through lysergic acid. Further, the yields are higher with this method
than those proceeding through lysergic acid, and there is less
formation of the inactive iso-LSD than with other methods. Iso-LSD is
not a complete loss since it can be converted to the active LSD, but it is
best to avoid its formation in the first place.
This method has a serious drawback. Anhydrous hydrazine is not
available off the shelf at your local hardware store, and attempts to
procure it through normal channels are likely to catch the attention of
those shit-eating dogs at the DBA. I include in this chapter directions for
making your own anhydrous hydrazine, but be warned here that
failure to use a nitrogen atmosphere during the distillation of
anhydrous hydrazine will likely lead to an explosion. On that cheery
note, let's begin!
Step One:
Conversion of Ergot Amides
to Lysergic Acid Hvdrazide
The reaction above is illustrated for ergotamine, but the process is
just as valid when a mixture of amides is used as extracted from the
4
LSD Directly From The Lysergic Amides —
The One Pot Shot
25
crop. Further, the crop amides have been left in the freebase form, so
the procedure given in example 5 in US patent 3,239,530 is used. This is
superior to trying to make a hydrochloride salt of the amides, as
suggested in example 1, because this would expose the active
ingredients to loss and destruction during the unnecessary handling.
There are three main precautions to be followed while executing
this procedure. Water must be rigorously excluded from the reaction
mixture, as hydrazine hydrate will react with the amides to form
racemic lysergic acid hydrazide rather than our desired product. To
ensure the exclusion of water from the reaction, the glassware should be
baked in an electric oven prior to use, and be allowed to cool off in a
dessicator. A drying tube should be attached to the top of the
condenser used, to prevent humidity in the air from getting in the mix.
Naturally, the hydrazine used had better be anhydrous.
Another danger to success is exposure to light. Work should be
done under a dim red darkroom bulb. The flask containing the
reaction mixture should be wrapped in aluminum foil to exclude light.
Procedures such as extractions and filtering should be done as rapidly as
possible without causing spills.
Finally, this reaction should be done under a nitrogen atmosphere,
as hot hydrazine and oxygen do not get along too well.
In a 500 ml round-bottom flask place a magnetic stirring bar, 10
grams of the ergot amide mixture (dried in a vacuum dessicator to
ensure its freedom from water), 50 ml of anhydrous hydrazine, and 10 ml
of glacial acetic acid. A condenser equipped with a drying tube is then
attached to the flask, and the flask wrapped in a single layer of
aluminum foil. The flask is then lowered into a glass dish containing
cooking oil heated to 140° C on a magnetic-stirrer hot-plate. When the
flask goes into the oil, the heat should be backed off on the hot-plate so
that both oil and flask meet each other in the middle at 120° C.
Monitor the warming of the contents of the flask by occasional
insertion of a thermometer. Stir at moderate speed. In about 10
minutes, the desired temperature range is reached, and some gentle
boiling begins. Maintain the temperature of the oil bath at 120-125° C,
and heat the batch for 30 minutes.
Practical LSD Manufacture
26
When 30 minutes heating at 120° C is complete, add 200 ml
water to the batch, increase the oil temperature to 140° C, and rig the
glassware for simple distillation. Distill off between 200 to 250 ml
water, hydrazine hydrate and acetic acid mixture. Then remove the
flask from the heated oil, and allow it to cool. Use of an aspirator
vacuum to assist the distillation is highly recommended.
When the flask has cooled, add 100 ml of decimolar tartaric-acid
solution (1.5 grams tartaric acid in 100 ml water) to the flask, and 100
ml ether. Stopper the flask, and shake vigorously for a few minutes,
with frequent breaks to vent off built-up pressure from the flask. If the
stirring bar bangs too violently in the flask, remove it with a magnet
rather than break the flask.
Pour the contents of the flask into a 250 ml sep funnel, and drain
the lower layer (water solution of lysergic acid hydrazide tartarate)
into a 250 ml Erlenmeyer flask wrapped in foil. To the ether layer still in
the sep funnel, add 50 ml fresh decimolar tartaric-acid solution, and
shake. Examine the water layer for the presence of lysergic acid
hydrazide with a black light. If there is a significant amount, add this
also to the Erlenmeyer flask.
Place the magnetic stirring bar in the Erlenmeyer flask, and stir it
moderately. Monitor the pH of the solution with a properly calibrated
pH meter, and slowly add .5M (20 grams per liter) sodium hydroxide
solution until the pH has risen to the range of 8-8.5. Higher pH will
cause racemization. The freebase is then extracted from the water
solution with chloroform. Two extractions with 100 ml of chloroform
should complete the extraction, but check a third extraction with the
black light to ensure that most all of the product lysergic acid
hydrazide has been extracted.
The chloroform extracts should be evaporated under a vacuum in a
500 ml flask to yield the product. This is best done by rigging the 500
ml flask for simple distillation, and applying an aspirator vacuum to
remove the chloroform. Assume that the yield from this procedure will
be about 5 grams of lysergic acid hydrazide if ergot was the crop used.
Assume that the yield will be about 7.5 grams if seeds were used.
The difference here is due to the fact that in ergot, the amides
4
LSD Directly From The Lysergic Amides —
The One Pot Shot
27
are largely composed of substances in which the portion lopped off is
about as large as the lysergic acid molecule. Seeds tend to be more
conservative as to their building upon the lysergic molecule. A careful
weighing on a sensitive scale comparing the weight of the flask before
and after would give a more exact number.
Both of these choices are really very poor, because lysergic acid
hydrazide, unlike most other lysergic compounds, crystallizes very
well with negligible loss of product. At the hydrazide stage of LSD
manufacture, one has a perfect opportunity to get an exceedingly pure
product, freed from clavine alkaloids and other garbage compounds
carried in from the extraction of the complex plant material.
I refer the reader to US patent 2,090,429 issued to Albert
Hofmann and Arthur Stoll, the dynamic duo of lysergic chemistry,
dealing with lysergic acid hydrazide. In this patent, they describe in a
rather excited state how they were able to produce pure lysergic acid
hydrazide from tank scrapings that were otherwise impure junk.
Lysergic acid hydrazide has the following properties: it dissolves
easily in acid, but is very difficultly soluble in water, ether, benzene
and chloroform. In hot absolute ethanol it is slightly soluble, and is
crystallizable in this solvent to yield "beautiful, compact, clear, on sixsided
cut-crystal plates that melt with decomposition at 235-240° C."
This is obviously the way to go. The hydrazide should be
recrystallized from absolute ethanol, and then dried under a vacuum to
remove residual alcohol clinging to the crystals. About 300 ml of hot
ethanol is required to dissolve each gram of lysergic acid hydrazide
during the crystallization. Upon cooling, a first crop of pure lysergic
acid hydrazide is obtained. Then, by boiling away half of the mother
liquor and cooling, an additional crop is obtained. This process can be
continued as long as the crystals obtained look nice.
Practical LSD Manufacture
28
Step Two: Lysergic Acid
Pyrazole
In this reaction, one mole of lysergic acid hydrazide is dissolved in
an inert, water-miscible solvent like ethanol. Then an excess of 1-molar
hydrochloric acid is added to form a salt with the lysergic acid
hydrazide. To this mixture is then added two moles of acetylacetone
(2,4-pentanedione), which forms the desired pyrazole. This reaction is
not nearly as touchy as the formation of the hydrazide. The presence of
traces of moisture from the air poses no problem. 2,4-pentanedione finds
use in analytical chemistry as a chelating agent for transition metals,
and as such should be available without raising too many red flags.
Synthesis of this compound is not hard, and directions for doing so are
found in US Patents 2,737,528 and 2,834,811.
To do the reaction, the flask containing the 5 grams of hydrazide is
wrapped in a single layer of foil to exclude light. Then a magnetic
stirring bar is added, along with 18 ml of ethanol, 18 ml water, 20 ml 1-
molar HC1 (made by adding one part 37% HC1 to 11 parts water) and
this mixture is stirred for a few minutes. Then 3.5 grams (3.5 ml) of
2,4-pentanedione is added at room temperature, and the stirring
continued for an hour or so.
The product is recovered from solution by the slow addition with
stirring of 20 ml 1-molar NaOH (40 grams per liter). This
neutralization throws the pyrazole out of solution as a solid. The solid is
collected by filtration through a Buchner funnel, and rinsed off with
4
LSD Directly From The Lysergic Amides —
The One Pot Shot 29
some water. The crystals are then dried under a vacuum, preferably
with the temperature elevated to 60° C. Further purification can be
done by crystallization. If so desired, dissolve the crystals in
chloroform, then add 8-10 volumes of ether to precipitate the product. I
do not feel this is necessary if the hydrazide used was reasonably
pure, since all the reagents used in the last step are soluble in water.
The water rinse should have carried them away. Further, alcohol and
2,4-pentanedione are volatile, and would be removed in the vacuum
drying.
Step Three:
LSD
CH,
This simple and easy reaction is done as follows: In a flask
wrapped in a single layer of foil are placed 1 gram lysergic acid
pyrazole, and 30 ml diethylamine. Diethylamine is a definite "do not
purchase" item. Easy directions for its synthesis are given in this
chapter. The two ingredients are swirled until mixed, then allowed to
stand at room temperature for about a day.
The excess diethylamine is then distilled off, and saved for use in
future batches. Dimethylpyrazole is a high-boiling-point substance,
and easily separated from diethylamine. When most of the
diethylamine has been distilled off, a vacuum is applied, and the
residue is evaporated to dryness. The evaporation is completed by
Practical LSD Manufacture
30
warming the flask in boiling water for a few minutes with continued
application of vacuum. The residue is almost pure LSD.
Purification and Storage
At this point, the process has yielded LSD freebase. In this state,
the substance is quite unstable and not suitable for storage. A
judgment as to the purity of the product is therefore needed in quick
order, because which method of further processing to use is dependent
upon the purity of the product. If there is reason to believe that a
significant amount of iso-LSD is mixed in with the product, the
following chromatographic separation is called for. The iso-LSD can
then be recovered and converted to the active LSD, which greatly
increases the value of the product. Iso-LSD can be expected to be
formed using the process in this chapter if the additions of sodium
hydroxide were not sufficiently slow, and local areas of high pH
developed in the solution. Using methods in other chapters proceeding
through lysergic acid, a large amount of the iso product can be
expected if lysergic acid was made by use of hydrazine hydrate or HOH.
Also, some of the natural alkaloids are of the iso form and yield iso-
LSD. The procedure for acid production using trifluoroacetic anhydride
will always make a lot of the iso product. The best procedure I can
recommend is: whatever method has been used, check the product
through chromatography for the presence of the iso-LSD. The following
procedure is taken from US patent 2,736,728.
3.5 grams of LSD freebase is dissolved in 160 ml of a 3-1 mixture of
benzene and chloroform (120 ml benzene, 40 ml chloroform).
Next, a chromatography column is constructed from a burette. It must
hold about 240 grams of basic alumina (not acidic alumina), so a 100
ml burette is called for. A wad of cotton and filter paper is stuffed
down the burette against the stopcock to keep the particles of alumina
from flowing out. The 240 grams of basic alumina are then poured
into the burette with tapping to assure it is well packed. The alumina
should then be wetted with some 3-1 benzene-chloroform.
4
LSD Directly From The Lysergic Amides —
The One Pot Shot 31
Now the 160 ml of benzene-chloroform containing the LSD is run
slowly into the burette, followed by more benzene-chloroform to
develop the chromatogram. As the mixture flows downward through
the alumina, two zones that fluoresce blue can be spotted by
illumination with a black light. The faster-moving zone contains LSD,
while the slower-moving zone is iso-LSD.
When the zone containing LSD reaches the spigot of the burette, it
should be collected in a separate flask. About 3000 ml of the 3-1
benzene-chloroform is required to get the LSD moved down the
chromatography column, and finally eluted.
The iso-LSD is then flushed from the column by switching the
solvent being fed into the top of the column to chloroform. This
material is collected in a separate flask, and the solvent removed
under a vacuum. The residue is iso-LSD, and should be stored in the
freezer until conversion to LSD is undertaken. Directions for this are
also given in this chapter.
For the fraction containing the LSD, conversion to LSD tartrate
must be done to make it water soluble, improve its keeping
characteristics, and to allow crystallization. Tartaric acid has the
ability to react with two molecules of LSD. Use, then, of a 50% excess of
tartaric acid dictates the use of about 1 gram of tartaric acid to 3
grams of LSD. The three grams of LSD would be expected from a
well-done batch out of a total 3.5 LSD/iso-LSD mix.
The crystalline tartrate is made by dissolving one gram of tartaric
acid in a few mis of methanol, and adding this acid solution to the
benzene-chloroform elute from the chromatography column.
Evaporation of the solvent to a low volume under a vacuum gives
crystalline LSD tartrate. Crystals are often difficult to obtain. Instead,
an oil may result due to the presence of impurities. This is not cause
for alarm; the oil is still likely 90%+ pure. It should be bottled up in
dark glass, preferably under a nitrogen atmosphere, and kept in a
freezer until moved.
If chromatography reveals that one's chosen cooking method
produces little of the iso products, then the production of the tartrate
salt and crystallization is simplified. The residue obtained at the end
Practical LSD Manufacture
32
of the batch is dissolved in a minimum amount of methanol. To this is
then added tartaric acid. The same amount is added as above: one gram
tartaric acid to three grams LSD. Next, ether is slowly added with
vigorous stirring until a precipitate begins to form. The stoppered flask is
then put in the freezer overnight to complete the precipitation. After
filtering or centrifuging to isolate the product, it is transferred to a dark
bottle, preferably under nitrogen, and kept in the freezer until moved.
LSD from (so-LSD
Two variations on this procedure will be presented here. The first is
the method of Smith and Timmis from The Journal of the
Chemistry Society Volume 139, H pages 1168-1169 (1936). The other is
found in US patent 2,736,728. Both use the action of a strong
hydroxide solution to convert iso material into a mixture that contains
active and iso material. At equilibrium, the mixture contains about 2/3
active material and 1/3 iso material. These substances are separated by
chromatography, and the iso material saved to be added to the batch
the next time isomerization is done. In this way, eventually all of the
product becomes active material.
Method One
The iso-LSD as eluted from the chromatography column is first
evaporated under a vacuum to remove the solvent. The residue is then
dissolved in 1-molar alcoholic KOH, and boiled under reflux,
preferably with a nitrogen atmosphere, for 30 minutes.
The mixture is next cooled and diluted with 3 volumes of water. It is
next acidified with HC1, then made alkaline again with sodium
carbonate. The product is now extracted from solution with ether or
chloroform. After removal of the solvent, the product can be chromatographed
as previously described.
4
LSD Directly From The Lysergic Amides —
The One Pot Shot 33
Method Two
The iso-LSD as eluted from the chromatography is first
evaporated under a vacuum to remove the solvent. The residue is
dissolved in the minimum amount of alcohol, and then one half
volume of 4-molar KOH in 100 proof vodka is added. The mixture is
allowed to sit at room temperature for a couple of hours, then the
alkali is neutralized by adding dry ice. The solvents are next removed
under a vacuum, and the residue chromatographed as previously
described.
Preparation of Anhydrous Hydrazine
Anhydrous hydrazine can be made from the easily available raw
materials: bleach, ammonia, sulfuric acid and potassium hydroxide.
This is not a task to be undertaken lightly, as there are dangers
inherent in the process. Hydrazine will likely detonate during
distillation if the distillation is not done in a nitrogen atmosphere.
Also, hydrazine is a vicious poison prone to absorption through the
skin or by inhalation of its vapors. It is very corrosive to living tissue,
and its burning effects may be delayed. Hydrazine can also be
assumed to be a carcinogen. All steps in its preparation must be done
with proper ventilation, and protection of the body from spills.
Step One: Hydrazine Sulfate
2NH3 + NaOCI ——> NH2 NH2 + H2O + NaCI NH2NH2
+ H2S04 ——> NH2 NH2 H2S 04
Into a 3-quart-capacity glass baking dish (Pyrex) put 750 ml
strong ammonia (28% NH3), 350 ml distilled water, 190 ml 10%
gelatine solution, and 700 ml 12.5% bleach. This strength of bleach is
Practical LSD Manufacture
34
available from pool supply companies and makers of cleaners. The
5.25% strength Clorox will not do here. One must also be aware that
traces of iron and copper have a ve