Comparing E307B - concentrated tocopherol vs E308 - Gamme-tocopherol

Synonyms
E307b
concentrated tocopherol
E308
Gamme-tocopherol
gamma-Tocopherol
Products

Found in 9 products

Found in 4 products

Search rank & volume
#49830 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#408120 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.67
under-aware

×2.50
over-aware

Search volume over time

Search history data is not available.

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

Popular questions

Popular questions data is not available.

  1. What is d gamma tocopherol?

    d‑γ‑tocopherol is the naturally occurring stereoisomer of gamma‑tocopherol, a vitamin E compound used as the antioxidant food additive E308, typically derived from vegetable oils or produced synthetically.

  2. Why is e308 infinity?

    If you mean the food additive code E308, “infinity” doesn’t apply—it refers to gamma‑tocopherol, an antioxidant; you may be thinking of scientific notation where “E308” means ×10^308 in calculators, which is unrelated.

  3. 10 mg gamma tocopherol is how many iu?

    There’s no direct IU conversion for γ‑tocopherol because vitamin E IUs are defined for α‑tocopherol activity; some older systems counted γ‑tocopherol as ~0.1 mg α‑TE per mg, but modern labeling generally does not convert it to IU.

  4. Beta gamma tocopherol standard what is normal range?

    There is no single regulatory “normal range” for β‑ or γ‑tocopherol as food additives—specifications vary by manufacturer and use; in clinical testing, reference intervals for blood levels also vary by lab, and nutrition labeling typically counts only α‑tocopherol.

  5. Crusaders of the lost idol how to get past the e308 cap?

    That refers to a video‑game notation (~10^308) and isn’t related to the food additive E308; in foods, E308 simply denotes γ‑tocopherol used as an antioxidant.