Silk Road forums
Discussion => Drug safety => Topic started by: BovineBrigadier on December 06, 2012, 01:29 pm
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I am considering buying some liquid LSD which would last me quite a long time. I was wondering which gases in air it reacts with? Is it just the O2? Is CO2 nonreactive with with LSD? I know N2 and He are more inert. However producing and using N2 at home is fairly impractical and due to being lighter than air He bought for balloons would be impractical for liquid (although could easily be used for storing blotter). If CO2 is nonreactive with LSD it is something which I (or anyone else) could easily produce at home and would be easy to use due to it's heavier than air nature. I know this is not the only factor in LSD degrading (heat, light and moisture) but there are easy/obvious ways to combat these.
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CO2 is non reactive and is reputedly what most "lab guys" use when storing large amounts of crystal or liquid. So that you can definitely use.
Know that O2 is reactive - don't have more of a list unfortunately, but co2 you can for sure use.
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Excellent; thanks for the reply. That's excellent news, I can easily replace air with CO2.
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I think moisture is much more of a problem to LSD than oxygen.
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Keeping acid avoid chlorine ions also beside heat, uv light and oxygen..