Comparing E341 - Calcium phosphates vs E339I - Monosodium phosphate
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Found in 17,598 products
Found in 126 products
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Popular questions
How does calcium phosphate transfection work?
DNA is mixed with calcium chloride and then added to a phosphate buffer to form fine calcium phosphate–DNA precipitates that attach to cells and are taken up (endocytosis), delivering the genetic material. This is a lab technique and not a food use of E341.
What is mono calcium phosphate?
Monocalcium phosphate [Ca(H2PO4)2], designated E341(i), is an acidic calcium phosphate used as a leavening acid and acidity regulator in baking, and it is relatively water‑soluble.
What is dibasic calcium phosphate?
Dibasic (dicalcium) phosphate [CaHPO4], E341(ii), is a sparingly water‑soluble calcium phosphate used as an anti‑caking agent, buffering agent, and mineral fortificant.
Is calcium phosphate soluble in water?
It depends on the form: monocalcium phosphate is fairly soluble, dicalcium phosphate is sparingly soluble, and tricalcium phosphate is practically insoluble.
What is di calcium phosphate?
Dicalcium phosphate (dibasic calcium phosphate, CaHPO4), E341(ii), is a low‑solubility form used in foods as an anti‑caking agent and as a calcium/phosphate fortificant.
Is monosodium phosphate bad for you?
At permitted food levels E339(i) is generally considered safe; EFSA has set a group ADI for phosphates of 40 mg/kg body weight per day (as phosphorus). Very high intakes may be a concern for people with kidney disease or those needing to limit sodium/phosphate.
Explain why an aqueous solution of monosodium phosphate would be ineffective?
As a buffer near neutral pH, a solution of only monosodium phosphate (NaH2PO4) is too acidic and lacks its conjugate base; effective phosphate buffering requires a mixture of mono- and disodium phosphate (H2PO4−/HPO42−) at the target pH.
How does monosodium phosphate make gas?
In leavening systems it acts as an acid that reacts with baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) to release carbon dioxide gas, which aerates doughs and batters; by itself it does not generate gas.
How to change the ph of protein solution without precipitation using monobasic sodium phosphate?
Use a phosphate buffer pair: slowly titrate with small amounts of monobasic (NaH2PO4) and disodium phosphate (Na2HPO4) to reach the target pH, staying away from the protein’s isoelectric point and keeping the buffer modest (e.g., ~10–50 mM). Make adjustments gradually with constant stirring and temperature, maintaining ionic strength (a little NaCl can help) to minimize precipitation.
How to clean up monosodium phosphate?
For small spills, avoid dust, sweep or scoop up the solid and rinse the area with water; for solutions, absorb with inert material and dispose according to local regulations. Because it’s highly water‑soluble and nutrient-rich, avoid flushing large amounts to drains or waterways.