LonelyStoner
Member
So my friend bought himself a magic flight a few weeks back and he says he really likes it (though he has already had to use his warranty for breaking the screen)
Anyway I was in a library doing some research when I decided to look up tetrahydrocannabinol in the Merck Index. I was puzzled to find that its boiling point (temperature at which vaporization occurs) around 300 degree Fahrenheit. I then looked up cannabidiol and saw it as well vaporized at a high temperature of 350 degree Fahrenheit. If the point of vaporization is to avoid combustion, then why are the two primarily active chemicals in weed have boiling points higher than that when plant matter combusts (roughly 220 degree Fahrenheit)? What are people getting high off of if their vaporizers are heated at a temperature that at least a hundred degrees of from THC's/CNB's boiling point?
Anyway I was in a library doing some research when I decided to look up tetrahydrocannabinol in the Merck Index. I was puzzled to find that its boiling point (temperature at which vaporization occurs) around 300 degree Fahrenheit. I then looked up cannabidiol and saw it as well vaporized at a high temperature of 350 degree Fahrenheit. If the point of vaporization is to avoid combustion, then why are the two primarily active chemicals in weed have boiling points higher than that when plant matter combusts (roughly 220 degree Fahrenheit)? What are people getting high off of if their vaporizers are heated at a temperature that at least a hundred degrees of from THC's/CNB's boiling point?