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- LSD-25 Synthesis from "Psychedelic Guide to the Preparation of
- the Eucharist":
-
- Preparatory arrangements:
- Starting material may be any lysergic acid derivative,
- from ergot on rye grain or from culture, or morning glory
- seeds or from synthetic sources. Preparation #1 uses any
- amide, or lysergic acid as starting material. Preparations #2
- and #3 must start with lysergic acid only, prepared from the
- amides as follows:
- 10 g of any lysergic acid amide from various natural
- sources dissolved in 200 ml of methanolic KOH solution and the
- methanol removed immediately in vacuo. The residue is treated
- with 200 ml of an 8% aqueous solution of KOH and the mixture
- heated on a steam bath for one hour. A stream of nitrogen gas
- is passed through the flask during heating and the evolved NH3
- gas may be titrated is HCl to follow the reaction. The
- alkaline solution is made neutral to congo red with tartaric
- acid, filtered, cleaned by extraction with ether, the aqueous
- solution filtered and evaporated. Digest with MeOH to remove
- some of the coloured material from the crystals of lysergic
- acid.
- Arrange the lighting in the lab similarly to that of a
- dark room. Use photographic red and yellow safety lights, as
- lysergic acid derivatives are decomposed when light is
- present. Rubber gloves must be worn due to the highly
- poisonous nature of ergot alkaloids. A hair drier, or, better,
- a flash evaporator, is necessary to speed up steps where
- evaporation is necessary.
-
- Preparation #1
-
- Step I. Use Yellow light
- Place one volume of powdered ergot alkaloid material in a
- tiny roundbottom flask and add two volumes of anhydrous
- hydrazine. An alternate procedure uses a sealed tube in which
- the reagents are heated at 112 C. The mixture is refluxed (or
- heated) for 30 minutes. Add 1.5 volumes of H2O and boil 15
- minutes. On cooling in the refrigerator, isolysergic acid
- hydrazide is crystallised.
-
- Step II. Use Red light
- Chill all reagents and have ice handy. Dissolve 2.82 g
- hydrazine rapidly in 100 ml 0.1 N ice-cold HCl using an ice
- bath to keep the reaction vessel at 0 C. 100 ml ice-cold 0.1 N
- NaNO2 is added and after 2 to 3 minutes vigorous stirring, 130
- ml more HCl is added dropwise with vigorous stirring again in
- an ice bath. After 5 minutes, neutralise the solution with
- NaHCO3 saturated sol. and extract with ether. Remove the
- aqueous solution and try to dissolve the gummy substance in
- ether. Adjust the ether solution by adding 3 g diethylamine
- per 300 ml ether extract. Allow to stand in the dark,
- gradually warming up to 20 C over a period of 24 hours.
- Evaporate in vacuum and treat as indicated in the purification
- section for conversion of iso-lysergic amides to lysergic acid
- amides.
-
- Preparation #2
-
- Step I. Use Yellow light
- 5.36 g of d-lysergic acid are suspended in 125 ml of
- acetonitrile and the suspension cooled to about -20 C in a
- bath of acetone cooled with dry ice. To the suspension is
- added a cold (-20 C) solution of 8.82 g of trifluoroacetic
- anhydride in 75 ml of acetonitrile. The mixture is allowed to
- stand at -20 C for about 1.5 hours during which the suspended
- material dissolves, and the d-lysergic acid is converted to
- the mixed anhydride of lysergic and trifluoroacetic acids. The
- mixed anhydride can be separated in the form of an oil by
- evaporating the solvent in vacuo at a temperature below 0 C,
- but this is not necessary. Everything must be kept anhydrous.
-
- Step II. Use Yellow light
- The solution of mixed anhydrides in acetonitrile from
- Step I is added to 150 ml of a second solution of acetonitrile
- containing 7.6 g of diethylamine. The mixture is held in the
- dark at room temperature for about 2 hours. The acetonitrile
- is evaporated in vacuo, leaving a residue of LSD-25 plus other
- impurities. The residue is dissolved in 150 ml of chloroform
- and 20 ml of ice water. The chloroform layer is removed and
- the aqueous layer is extracted with several portions of
- chloroform. The chloroform portions are combined and in turn
- washed with four 50 ml portions of ice-cold water. The
- chloroform solution is then dried over anhydrous Na2SO4 and
- evaporated in vacuo.
-
-
- Preparation #3
- This procedure gives good yield and is very fast with
- little iso-lysergic acid being formed (its effect are mildly
- unpleasant). However, the stoichometry must be exact or yields
- will drop.
-
- Step I. Use White light
- Sulfur trioxide is produced in anhydrous state by
- carefully decomposing anhydrous ferric sulfate at
- approximately 480 C. Store under anhydrous conditions.
-
- Step II. Use White light
- A carefully dried 22 litre RB flask fitted with an ice
- bath, condenser, dropping funnel and mechanical stirrer is
- charged with 10 to 11 litres of dimethylformamide (freshly
- distilled under reduced pressure). The condenser and dropping
- funnel are both protected against atmospheric moisture. 2 lb
- of sulfur trioxide (Sulfan B) are introduced dropwise, very
- cautiously stirring, during 4 to 5 hours. The temperature is
- kept at 0-5 C throughout the addition. After the addition is
- complete, the mixture is stirred for 1-2 hours until some
- separated, crystalline sulfur trioxide-dimethylformamide
- complex has dissolved. The reagent is transferred to an air-
- tight automatic pipette for convenient dispensing, and kept in
- the cold. Although the reagent, which is colourless, may
- change from yellow to red, its efficiency remains unimpaired
- for three to four months in cold storage. An aliquot is
- dissolved in water and titrated with standard NaOH to a
- phenolphthalein end point.
-
- Step III. Use Red light
- A solution of 7.15 g of d-lysergic acid mono hydrate (25
- mmol) and 1.06 g of lithium hydroxide hydrate (25 mmol) in 200
- ml of MeOH is prepared. The solvent is distilled on the steam
- bath under reduced pressure. the residue of glass-like lithium
- lysergate is dissolved in 400 ml of anhydrous dimethyl
- formamide. From this solution about 200 ml of the dimethyl
- formamide is distilled off at 15 ml pressure through a 12 inch
- helices packed column. the resulting anhydrous solution of
- lithium lysergate left behind is cooled to 0 C and, with
- stirring, treated rapidly with 500 ml of SO3-DMF solution
- (1.00 molar). The mixture is stirred in the cold for 10
- minutes and then 9.14 g (125.0 mmol) of diethylamine is added.
- The stirring and cooling are continued for 10 minutes longer,
- when 400 ml of water is added to decompose the reaction
- complex. After mixing thoroughly, 200 ml of saturated aqueous
- saline solution is added. The amide product is isolated by
- repeated extraction with 500 ml portions of ethylene
- dichloride. the combined extract is dried and then
- concentrated to a syrup under reduced pressure. Do not heat up
- the syrup during concentration. the LSD may crystallise out,
- but the crystals and the mother liquor may be chromatographed
- according to the instructions on purification.
-
- Purification of LSD-25
- The material obtained by any of these three preparations
- may contain both lysergic acid and iso-lysergic acid amides.
- Preparation #1 contains mostly iso-lysergic diethylamide and
- must be converted prior to separation. For this material, go
- to Step II first.
-
- Step I. Use darkroom and follow with a long wave UV
- The material is dissolved in a 3:1 mixture of benzene and
- chloroform. Pack the chromatography column with a slurry of
- basic alumina in benzene so that a 1 inch column is six inches
- long. Drain the solvent to the top of the alumina column and
- carefully add an aliquot of the LSD-solvent solution
- containing 50 ml of solvent and 1 g LSD. Run this through the
- column, following the fastest moving fluorescent band. After
- it has been collected, strip the remaining material from the
- column by washing with MeOH. Use the UV light sparingly to
- prevent excessive damage to the compounds. Evaporate the
- second fraction in vacuo and set aside for Step II. The
- fraction containing the pure LSD is concentrated in vacuo and
- the syrup will crystallise slowly. This material may be
- converted to the tartrate by tartaric acid and the LSD
- tartrate conveniently crystallised. MP 190-196 C.
-
- Step II. Use Red light
- Dissolve the residue derived from the methanol stripping
- of the column in a minimum amount of alcohol. Add twice that
- volume of 4 N alcoholic KOH solution and allow the mixture to
- stand at room temperature for several hours. Neutralise with
- dilute HCl, make slightly basic with NH4OH and extract with
- chloroform or ethylene dichloride as in preparations #1 or #2.
- Evaporate in vacuo and chromatograph as in the previous step.
-
- Note: Lysergic acid compounds are unstable to heat, light and
- oxygen. In any form it helps to add ascorbic acid as an anti-
- oxidant, keeping the container tightly closed, light-tight
- with aluminum foil, and in a refrigerator.
-
-