What I find extremely interesting about this study is what's left in the ABV after those 30 draws (I clipped Figure 2 from the white paper below). While obviously a lot of the THC has been extracted, THC is still the primary active component in the ABV - much more so than CBD.
Also, roughly 1/3 of the THC left in the ABV is THCa. A common perception is that when cooking with ABV you dont need to decarb because vaporizing does it all for you. This appears only partially true...ABV chefs could conceivably increase potency by 30% if they decarbed their ABV first.
In Figure 1 I notice THC concentrations are shown as a % of the max concentration. It doesnt say "70% of the THC has been extracted after 30 draws". Is it possible to recut the data in Figure 2 to show absolute rather than relative concentrations so we can draw a conclusion around how much THC remains relative to what you started with?
First time Ive seen this type of data before. Great job!