Comparing E203 - Calcium sorbate vs E905CI - Microcrystalline wax

Synonyms
E203
Calcium sorbate
E905ci
Microcrystalline wax
Products

Found in 8 products

Found in 23 products

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#360250 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2631.5K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×3.19
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×8.01
over-aware

Search volume over time

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

Popular questions
  1. Aia e203 is a contract document that has which of the following information:?

    In food labeling, E203 refers to calcium sorbate, a synthetic preservative (the calcium salt of sorbic acid) that inhibits molds and yeasts; it is unrelated to AIA contract documents.

  2. How often does asus update vivobook e203?

    That refers to a laptop model; in foods, E203 denotes calcium sorbate, a preservative used to prevent spoilage by molds and yeasts and it has no update cycle.

  3. How to fix e203 error?

    That's an equipment error code; in food contexts, E203 is calcium sorbate, a preservative that suppresses yeast and mold, and it is no longer authorized in the EU though permitted in some countries within limits.

  4. How to fix e203 samsung error code?

    Samsung’s “E203” error isn’t about the additive; E203 in foods is calcium sorbate, a synthetic preservative used to inhibit molds and yeasts.

  5. How to fix e203 xbox one?

    The Xbox One “E203” error is unrelated; on food labels, E203 denotes calcium sorbate, a sorbic acid salt used to preserve foods by inhibiting mold and yeast.

  1. What is microcrystalline wax made of?

    A mineral wax refined from petroleum residuals (de-oiled petrolatum), composed mainly of high–molecular-weight saturated hydrocarbons with branched and cyclic structures.

  2. 1 pound of microcrystalline wax weighs how much in everdur bronze?

    For the same volume, Everdur bronze (≈8.3–8.7 g/cm³) is about 9–10× denser than microcrystalline wax (≈0.90–0.95 g/cm³), so 1 lb of wax volume would weigh roughly 9–10 lb if cast in Everdur.

  3. At what temperature does microcrystalline wax melt?

    Typically about 60–90°C (140–194°F), depending on the grade; some hard grades approach ~95°C (203°F).

  4. How to determine the crystallinity of microcrystalline wax?

    Use differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) to estimate crystalline fraction from melting enthalpy and X‑ray diffraction (XRD/WAXS) to quantify crystalline versus amorphous phases; FTIR can provide supportive qualitative insight.

  5. How to make dark microcrystalline paste wax?

    Melt microcrystalline wax (optionally with 10–20% carnauba for hardness), then blend in odorless mineral spirits or turpentine to a paste consistency and disperse a small amount of carbon black or iron oxide pigment for color; mix thoroughly and cool, observing strict solvent fire-safety.