this post was submitted on 11 Sep 2023
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By "even amateurs could make" I wanted to highlight how relatively simple of a molecule it is, not that they should. The impact is mostly industrial, those things that "even amateurs could make" tend to be really cheap.
With that in mind CH₂Cl₂ isn't that big of a deal. It's a reagent and it needs to be treated with respect and care; just like any other reagent. The worst mistakes don't even happen with those dangerous chemicals, it's with the ones that people think that are safe because they get sloppy with them. (Calcium carbide, glacial acetic acid, hydrogen peroxide, this sort of stuff.)
I changed and highlighted a word that I have concerns about. Keeping in mind, an amateur would have to make sure they correctly purify the end product, and make sure dichloromethane isn't in the end product.
[DISCLAIMER: I'll emphasise for the sake of clueless readers that Nobody should this at home. I'm talking on abstract grounds, I just wanted to highlight that DIM is easy to produce thus likely cheap. Plus another poster highlighted that the "magic" product is already industrially produced. OK? Seriously, backyard organics is not like backyard electrolysis, there are 100 ways to die out of it.]
Leftover DCM in the end product is the least concern. Purification is basically "add diluted acid", keep the aqueous layer, discard/reuse the solvent layer. You could also boil it off to be extra sure, after crystallisation
The actual danger are the vapours, and mostly towards the amateur, not his guinea pig using this stuff. Carcinogenic, volatile, and flammable - if you try this on a Bunsen burner or a kitchen stove you're risking some explosion, specially if you don't ventilate this well. Amateurs have that tendency to think "this doesn't drip on my hand, it's invisible, so might as well not care that much about it", and then they get wrecked.