I'm way too tired to be any good help right now and I've been having some "eye challenges" apart from that but did I read correctly that you added 170ml of lye solution? If so that is an utter heaping buttload!!!!
50ml or 60 should usually get you a decent enough approximation of lye lock to be safely into high-pH land to get the freebase well into gear on its way towards non polar migration. usually enough of it has made the journey after 1/2 hour to then take some of the NP off the top to water wash and to then give an initial titration test to see if anything is really there.
I'd need to be more awake to do a proper job of evaluating what's really happened but just for your own education's sake read up on this method of basification. It should help you to round out your basification education even if you never actually use the technique which is described.
Really good emulsion info there too but that's just a samll portion of the value there.
Post 59240 (https://www.thevespiary.org/talk/index.php?topic=8378.msg5924000#msg5924000)
(Worlock: "Ker Plunking for quality and quantity", Stimulants)
Post 377287 (https://www.thevespiary.org/talk/index.php?topic=8378.msg37728700#msg37728700)
(ChemoSabe: "Das Ist Der Kerplunker", Stimulants)
good luck with your batch there and most likely it's OK and salvagable but I'm too far into dreamland to be of real practical help right now. Crash city here I come.
PS what you really need for this is advice from a seasoned freebase distiller which I'd never claim to be but in the mean time it wuldn't hurt you to check out these posts for your general info.
Adding hot water will unlock lye lock, if that is a problem. Add some hot water and pour everything, non-polar solvent, emulsion, polar layer--- in a big enough pot to heat it all up slowly.
As Chemo suggested, this is a good spot to use the ker plunk method.
There are some notes on fighting emulsions during a kerplunk in Post 428410 (https://www.thevespiary.org/talk/index.php?topic=8697.msg42841000#msg42841000)
(geezmeister: "The post-reaction workup: a cook's summary", Stimulants)
Everyone does this a time or two. That emulsion will teach you two things: 1) you don't want to shake the nonpolar and based reaction fluid together, and 2) if your are patient, you can recover from a lot of mistakes like this one.
Emulsions will break down with time, and most of them will break down with a little gentle heat. Be patient. If you can stand the wait, just put the stuff in quart jar with a lid on it, and let it sit. Take your time with the emulsion. Most emulsions will separate as the bubbles break down and you should get two layers again.
If you have an emulsion from hell which will not base at all, remember the meth you have in that solution is freebase. Simply evaporate all the solvent and water out of the emulsion, and when it is bone dry, cover it with nonpolar solvent and stir well, let settle, decant the solvent, wash it, then salt out the meth.