Comparing E129 - Allura red vs E152 - Black 7984

Synonyms
E129
Allura red
Allura red ac
Allura Red AC
FD&C Red 40
FD and C Red 40
Red 40
Red no40
Red no. 40
FD and C Red no. 40
Food Red 17
C.I. 16035
Red 40 lake
E152
Black 7984
Food Black 2
carbon black
Functions
Products

Found in 26,926 products

Found in 1 products

Search rank & volume
#9156.5K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1448.9K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.85
normal

×218.33
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 12 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 4 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Why is red 40 bad?

    Concerns focus on it being a synthetic azo dye and on studies suggesting small effects on attention and activity in some children (the EU requires a behavior warning label for E129). It may also trigger rare hypersensitivity reactions, though regulators (FDA, EFSA, JECFA) consider it safe at approved levels.

  2. Why is red 40 banned?

    It isn’t broadly banned—FD&C Red No. 40 is allowed in the U.S. and EU (with an EU warning about possible effects on children’s behavior). Some jurisdictions, schools, or brands choose to avoid it, but that’s a policy choice rather than a general prohibition.

  3. What is red 40 made of?

    Allura Red AC is a synthetic azo dye produced from petroleum‑derived aromatic compounds, typically used as its water‑soluble sodium salt (also available as calcium/potassium salts or aluminum lakes).

  4. What does red 40 do to your body?

    Most ingested Red 40 is not absorbed and is excreted; some is broken down by gut bacteria to aromatic amines. In sensitive individuals it can cause intolerance-like reactions, and some children may experience small, reversible changes in activity/attention; within the ADI (~7 mg/kg body weight/day) it’s considered safe by major regulators.

  5. What is red dye 40 made of?

    It’s a synthetic azo dye made from petroleum‑derived aromatic compounds, usually supplied as the water‑soluble sodium salt (and sometimes as calcium/potassium salts or aluminum lakes).

  1. What is black carbon?

    In the food-additive context, carbon black (E152, Food Black 2) is a synthetic paracrystalline carbon pigment made by incomplete combustion of heavy oils; it is distinct from atmospheric “black carbon” (soot).

  2. What is carbon black used for?

    As a food additive it serves as a black colorant (though it is not permitted in the EU and many other jurisdictions); beyond food, it’s widely used to reinforce rubber (especially tires) and as a pigment in plastics, inks, and paints.

  3. What is carbon black software?

    That refers to a cybersecurity product and is unrelated to the E152 food color; E152 carbon black is a manufactured black pigment historically used as Food Black 2.

  4. What is carbon black cloud?

    Carbon Black Cloud is a cybersecurity platform, not the food additive; E152 is a synthetic carbon pigment used as a black colorant.

  5. Who owns carbon black?

    If you mean the software company, that’s separate; as a material/food additive, carbon black (E152) is a generic commodity produced by multiple manufacturers and isn’t owned by any single company.