Comparing E307 - Alpha-tocopherol vs E309 - Delta-tocopherol

Synonyms
E307
Alpha-tocopherol
E309
Delta-tocopherol
δ-tocopherol
Products

Found in 340 products

Found in 5 products

Search rank & volume
#346330 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#47050 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.15
under-aware

×1.23
normal

Search volume over time

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

Search history data is not available.

Popular questions
  1. What is d alpha tocopherol?

    It’s the natural stereoisomer of vitamin E (RRR‑α‑tocopherol, E307), typically derived from vegetable oils and used as an antioxidant and nutrient in foods.

  2. Is d alpha tocopherol natural?

    Yes—“d‑” indicates the naturally occurring RRR‑α‑tocopherol, usually sourced from plant oils; the synthetic form is labeled “dl‑” (all‑rac‑α‑tocopherol).

  3. What is d-alpha tocopherol?

    It’s the natural form of vitamin E (RRR‑α‑tocopherol, E307), the most biologically active isomer and commonly used as an antioxidant in foods.

  4. Is d alpha tocopherol synthetic?

    No; the “d‑” form is natural, while the synthetic version is the racemic “dl‑” (all‑rac) α‑tocopherol.

  5. What is d alpha tocopherol acetate?

    It’s the acetate ester of d‑α‑tocopherol used for improved stability in foods and supplements; the body converts it to active α‑tocopherol.

  1. E309-16 what kind of welding rod?

    As a food additive, E309 is delta-tocopherol (a vitamin E antioxidant); “E309-16” is a welding electrode designation and is unrelated to food additives.

  2. Faketaxi e309 + who is this?

    I can’t help identify people in adult content; in foods, E309 refers to delta‑tocopherol, a vitamin E antioxidant.

  3. Girlsdoporn e309 who is?

    I can’t assist with identifying individuals in adult content; E309 in food is delta‑tocopherol, a vitamin E antioxidant.

  4. Girlsdoporn e309 who is she?

    I can’t assist with identifying individuals in adult content; E309 in food is delta‑tocopherol, a vitamin E antioxidant.

  5. In what foods are delta tocopherol?

    It occurs naturally in vegetable oils (especially soybean, corn, and canola) and in nuts and seeds. When used as an additive (E309), it stabilizes fats in products like cooking oils, margarines/shortenings, salad dressings, snacks, and fat‑rich baked goods.