Comparing E153 - Vegetable carbon vs E172I - Black iron oxide

Synonyms
E153
Vegetable carbon
E172i
Black iron oxide
Functions
Products

Found in 90 products

Found in 4 products

Search rank & volume
#373210 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#304600 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.38
under-aware

×10.30
over-aware

Search volume over time

Search history data is not available.

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. How to openline huawei e153?

    In foods, E153 refers to vegetable carbon—a plant-derived black color used to darken items like confectionery and cheese rinds; it’s permitted in the EU with strict purity limits for contaminants and is not approved as a food color in the U.S.

  2. 3sgte engine swap will the e153 fit and what years?

    For food, E153 is vegetable carbon, not a transmission; it’s a black coloring made by charring plant materials (e.g., wood or coconut shells) and purifying the carbon.

  3. E153 is what type of lsd?

    E153 is a food color additive (vegetable carbon), not a differential; it’s an inert carbon pigment that provides a black hue.

  4. E153 transmission came in which cars?

    As a food additive, E153 has no relation to cars; it’s approved for specified foods in regions like the EU, UK, and Australia/New Zealand, but not authorized as a food color in the United States.

  5. How to build a e153 transmission?

    E153 vegetable carbon is produced by controlled charring of plant materials (such as wood or coconut shells), followed by milling and purification to remove contaminants, then used as a black food color.

  1. What is black iron oxide used for?

    It’s a food colorant (E172) that provides black or gray tones, mainly used in surface decorations and coatings like confectionery, icings, and cheese rinds; it’s also common in capsules and tablets.

  2. How to make black iron oxide?

    Food‑grade black iron oxide is made industrially by controlled oxidation/precipitation of iron salts to form magnetite (Fe3O4), then washing, calcining, and milling to strict purity specs—not something to safely or legally produce at home.

  3. Is black iron oxide safe?

    Yes—when used within permitted limits it’s considered safe by regulators (e.g., EU E172), is poorly absorbed, and has tight impurity limits; note that allowed uses vary by country.

  4. What is black iron oxide powder?

    A fine, insoluble magnetite (Fe3O4) pigment that meets E172 food‑grade specifications and is used to color foods black; it does not meaningfully add dietary iron.

  5. What is iron oxide black?

    It’s another name for black iron oxide (magnetite, Fe3O4), the black variant of the E172 iron oxides used as a food color.