Possible method for determining the rough concentration of oils?
Step one is to draw about an mL of oil and then cooling it which may or may not cause precipitation. Then in the same syringe adding the same amount of ethanol, dioaxane, chloroform, or ether (ethanol or isopropanol would be the best choices) and mixing. Once the layers seperate, repeat 2 more times. Then add a smaller amount, remove that layer, and add water and see if there is any precipitation that isnt oil, and repeat until you dont see any more. Next, add the solvent to a different container and cool it again, and remove any visible oil. Then dry the solution, and weigh the powder for a rough estimation of concentration? It should be much more soluble in those solvents than cold oil.
Next could you try reagents? I've read a few papers about concentrated sulfuric acid, mandelins reagent, etc all turning different compounds either one colour or changing from one colour to another over time. I understand that it is subjective what colour it is but it should help you make an educated guess as to whether it is what you paid for or not.
Step one is to draw about an mL of oil and then cooling it which may or may not cause precipitation. Then in the same syringe adding the same amount of ethanol, dioaxane, chloroform, or ether (ethanol or isopropanol would be the best choices) and mixing. Once the layers seperate, repeat 2 more times. Then add a smaller amount, remove that layer, and add water and see if there is any precipitation that isnt oil, and repeat until you dont see any more. Next, add the solvent to a different container and cool it again, and remove any visible oil. Then dry the solution, and weigh the powder for a rough estimation of concentration? It should be much more soluble in those solvents than cold oil.
Next could you try reagents? I've read a few papers about concentrated sulfuric acid, mandelins reagent, etc all turning different compounds either one colour or changing from one colour to another over time. I understand that it is subjective what colour it is but it should help you make an educated guess as to whether it is what you paid for or not.
