CBN-C2 (cannabinol ethyl)
Rare cannabinol analog • Sometimes detected in ethanolic extracts • Mostly a lab and research cannabinoid
CBN-C2, also known as cannabinol ethyl or cannabinol-C2, is a rare cannabinol-family compound that shows up primarily in detailed chemical analysis and reference-standard catalogs. If you saw it on a COA from an ethanol-based extract and thought, “what is that,” this page is your decoder ring.
What is CBN-C2?
CBN-C2 is best described as a cannabinol analog. In plain English: it is chemically related to CBN, but it is not the same compound. It is sometimes labeled “C2” because it is an ethyl (two-carbon) homolog in the cannabinol family naming conventions.
Chemical identifiers commonly used in labs
- Common names: CBN-C2, Cannabinol ethyl, Cannabinol-C2
- CAS (often listed): 99623-70-8
- Molecular formula (often listed): C18H20O2
Why it is linked to ethanolic extracts
Ethanol extraction is broad-spectrum. It can pull cannabinoids, minor cannabinoids, and a long list of related plant compounds. When a lab runs high-sensitivity testing on an ethanolic extract, rare targets can show up simply because the sample is chemically dense and the detection methods are strong.
Effects and consumer claims
Public, consumer-focused research on CBN-C2 is limited. That means one thing: ignore dramatic marketing. If a product claims CBN-C2 is “stronger than everything” but cannot show consistent batch COAs and clean documentation, that is not science. That is a sales pitch wearing a lab coat.
If you see CBN-C2 on a COA
- Same lab method across batches
- Clear naming (CBN-C2 vs similar labels)
- Repeatability (not a one-off spike)
- Full panel context, not a single number
- Wild effect claims with no data
- No method transparency
- “Proprietary blend” hiding totals
- Inconsistent COAs batch to batch
CBN-C2 and vaporization
If you care about minor cannabinoids, controlled vaporization wins. Combustion destroys chemistry. Temperature control helps you stay in the zone where cannabinoids are released without lighting your plant on fire. That is the whole point of precision devices.
Frequently asked questions
Is CBN-C2 the same as CBN?
No. CBN-C2 is related to CBN but it is a distinct compound.
Is CBN-C2 common in cannabis?
No. It is generally considered rare and is most often discussed in analytical and research contexts.
Could CBN-C2 be misidentified?
Rare cannabinoids can be challenging depending on the method and reference standards. Consistent results across batches and lab transparency are the best reality check.
Does CBN-C2 cause sedation?
There is limited public evidence describing consumer effects for CBN-C2 specifically. Be cautious with sleep claims that are not backed by credible documentation.