Comparing E209 - Heptylparaben vs E237 - Sodium formiate

Synonyms
E209
Heptylparaben
E237
Sodium formiate
Sodium formate
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Popular questions
  1. Comp where to plug e209 cable?

    E209 is the E-number for heptylparaben, a synthetic paraben preservative (not permitted in EU foods); it isn’t a cable or plug.

  2. Doctor who e209?

    In food labeling, E209 means heptylparaben, a preservative not permitted in EU foods; it doesn’t refer to Doctor Who.

  3. How to charge razor scooter e209?

    E209 is heptylparaben, a food preservative (not permitted in EU foods) and unrelated to charging a Razor scooter.

  4. What does e209 mean on ambulance report?

    On food labels, E209 denotes heptylparaben, a preservative (not permitted in EU foods); it’s not a standard ambulance/EMS code.

  5. What does e209 member mean on ambulance report?

    E209 refers to heptylparaben in food contexts (not permitted in EU foods); “E209 member” on an ambulance report would be an unrelated internal code, not the additive.

  1. Is sodium formate an acid or base?

    It’s the sodium salt of formic acid; in water the formate ion acts as a weak base, so its solutions are mildly basic.

  2. Is sodium formate a strong base?

    No—it's a weak base; the formate ion only hydrolyzes slightly in water (formic acid pKa ≈ 3.75).

  3. . what is the effect on equilibrium when sodium formate is added to a solution of formic acid?

    It adds the common ion (formate), shifting HA ⇌ H+ + A− to the left, suppressing dissociation and creating a buffer; the solution becomes less acidic than pure formic acid.

  4. 1l solution of .05m sodium formate. what is final ph if 12ml of 1.0m hcl is added?

    About pH 4.25. Reaction converts 12 mmol formate to formic acid, leaving ~38 mmol A− and 12 mmol HA; with pKa ≈ 3.75, pH ≈ 3.75 + log(38/12) ≈ 4.25.

  5. Determind how much formic acid and sodium formate to make buffer?

    Specify the target pH and total buffer concentration, then use Henderson–Hasselbalch: [A−]/[HA] = 10^(pH − pKa). For example, at pH 4.25 with 0.10 M total buffer in 1 L, you’d need ~0.076 mol sodium formate and ~0.024 mol formic acid.