Comparing E331 - Sodium citrates vs E541 - Sodium aluminium phosphate

Synonyms
E331
Sodium citrates
E541
Sodium aluminium phosphate
Products

Found in 14,247 products

Found in 6,240 products

Search rank & volume
#388170 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#43390 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
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Popular questions
  1. What is e331 in food?

    E331 is sodium citrates—the mono-, di-, and trisodium salts of citric acid—used mainly as acidity regulators/buffers, sequestrants, and emulsifying salts in foods like soft drinks and processed cheese.

  2. How are sodium citrates used in molecular gastronomy?

    They’re used to adjust and buffer pH, chelate calcium, and act as an emulsifying salt—commonly to make ultra-smooth, meltable cheese sauces and to tune acidity/calcium levels for techniques like spherification and stabilizing foams.

  3. What are sodium citrates degradation byproducts?

    Under normal food use they’re stable; with strong heating/combustion they decompose to carbon oxides (CO2/CO) and sodium oxides (and related inorganic residues).

  4. Why does sodium citrates burn?

    It isn’t flammable; any “burning” sensation typically comes from irritation of skin, eyes, or mouth at high concentrations due to its mildly alkaline, saline nature, and on heating it decomposes rather than sustaining a flame.

  1. How to take apart a lenovo e541?

    That appears unrelated—E541 here refers to sodium aluminium phosphate, a food additive used as a leavening acid in baking powders (and as an emulsifying salt in processed cheese), not a Lenovo device.