Comparing E210 - Benzoic acid vs E429 - peptone

Synonyms
E210
Benzoic acid
E429
peptone
tryptone
Products

Found in 386 products

Found in 2 products

Search rank & volume
#7533.2K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2392.3K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×12.42
over-aware

×47.69
over-aware

Search volume over time

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

Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Is benzoic acid soluble in water?

    Only sparingly—about 3 g per liter at room temperature; its solubility increases in hot water and it dissolves readily in many organic solvents.

  2. Is benzoic acid polar?

    It has a polar carboxyl group but a nonpolar aromatic ring, so overall it’s only weakly polar; its benzoate salt is much more polar and water‑soluble.

  3. Is benzoic acid a strong acid?

    No—it's a weak acid, with a pKa of about 4.2.

  4. What is the melting point of benzoic acid?

    About 122–123 °C (251–253 °F).

  5. Is benzoic acid bad for you?

    At approved food levels it’s considered safe, with an ADI of 0–5 mg/kg body weight/day; some people may experience irritation or hypersensitivity, and benzene formation in certain acidic drinks is monitored and kept very low.

  1. What is a peptone?

    A peptone is a water‑soluble mix of short peptides, amino acids, and nutrients made by partial hydrolysis of proteins (e.g., casein, meat, or soy); it’s used as a nutrient source in culture media (tryptone is a casein peptone).

  2. What is the purpose of peptone in the media?

    It supplies readily assimilable nitrogen (peptides and amino acids), vitamins, and minerals to support microbial growth, including fastidious organisms.

  3. How to make peptone water?

    Dissolve 10 g peptone and 5 g sodium chloride in 1 L purified water, adjust pH to about 7.2 at 25°C, dispense, and sterilize by autoclaving at 121°C for 15 minutes.

  4. What is buffered peptone water?

    A phosphate‑buffered version of peptone water (per liter: peptone 10 g, NaCl 5 g, Na2HPO4 3.5 g, KH2PO4 1.5 g; pH ~7.2) used as a non‑selective pre‑enrichment medium to resuscitate stressed bacteria, especially Salmonella, from foods.

  5. What is peptone in microbiology?

    In microbiology, peptone refers to protein hydrolysates (from casein, meat, soy, etc.) rich in peptides and amino acids that serve as the main nitrogen source in culture media; different peptones (e.g., tryptone) can influence growth and test outcomes.