Comparing E341I - Monocalcium phosphate vs E503II - Ammonium hydrogen carbonate

Synonyms
E341i
Monocalcium phosphate
Monobasic calcium phosphate
mono-calcium phosphate
monocalcium phosphate
E 341i
E-341i
E341 i
E503ii
Ammonium hydrogen carbonate
Baker's ammonia
Sal volatile
Salt of hartshorn
Ammonium bicarbonate
Products

Found in 14,697 products

Found in 3,466 products

Search rank & volume
#1994.4K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1914.7K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.04
under-aware

×0.20
under-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 7 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 6 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Is monocalcium phosphate bad for you?

    No—at typical food levels it’s considered safe (GRAS in the U.S. and authorized in the EU); concerns mainly arise with excessive phosphate intake or in people with kidney disease.

  2. What does monocalcium phosphate do to your body?

    It dissociates into calcium and phosphate ions, common nutrients involved in bone structure and cellular energy, and at normal intakes has no special effects beyond contributing small amounts of these minerals; very high phosphate intake can disrupt mineral balance, especially with kidney problems.

  3. Is monocalcium phosphate dairy?

    No—it's a mineral salt made from phosphate rock and calcium sources, not from milk, so it’s dairy‑free.

  4. Is monocalcium phosphate vegan?

    Yes—it's typically produced from mineral sources and contains no animal-derived ingredients; strict vegans may still confirm sourcing with the manufacturer.

  5. What is monocalcium phosphate in food?

    It’s a leavening acid used in baking powders to react with baking soda and release carbon dioxide so baked goods rise; it also helps regulate acidity and can add calcium.

  1. Is ammonium bicarbonate bad for you?

    At normal food-use levels, ammonium bicarbonate (E503ii) isn’t considered harmful and decomposes during baking into carbon dioxide and ammonia that largely dissipate. High ammonia vapors can irritate eyes and airways, so thorough baking prevents residual odor or taste.

  2. Is ammonium bicarbonate safe in food?

    Yes—it's permitted as a leavening agent in many countries (GRAS in the U.S. and authorized in the EU as E503ii) when used under good manufacturing practice, and proper baking drives off residual ammonia.

  3. What is ammonium bicarbonate in food?

    Ammonium bicarbonate (ammonium hydrogen carbonate, “baker’s ammonia”) is a leavening agent used mainly in low-moisture baked goods. When heated, it releases carbon dioxide and ammonia to aerate dough and create a crisp texture.

  4. How to make ammonium bicarbonate buffer?

    Dissolve the needed amount in water (e.g., 7.9 g per liter for 0.1 M) and adjust to about pH 8 with ammonium hydroxide or dilute acid if required. Prepare fresh and keep cool, as it slowly decomposes and loses CO2/ammonia over time.

  5. What is ammonium bicarbonate used for?

    Primarily as a leavening agent for cookies, crackers, and traditional biscuits/gingerbread to achieve a dry, crisp texture. It’s also used as a pH control/buffering agent in some food and laboratory applications.