Comparing E355 - Adipic acid vs E359 - ammonium adipate

Synonyms
E355
Adipic acid
Hexanedioic acid
E359
ammonium adipate
Products

Found in 771 products

Found in 0 products

Search rank & volume
#2063.6K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#417100 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.68
under-aware

Awareness data is not available.

Search volume over time

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

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

Popular questions
  1. What is adipic acid used for?

    In foods (E355) it’s an acidulant that provides a clean, persistent tartness and pH control in powdered drink mixes, gelatin desserts, chewing gum, and as a slow-acting leavening acid in baking powders.

  2. How is adipic acid made?

    Industrial production mainly oxidizes a cyclohexanone/cyclohexanol (KA oil) mixture with nitric acid, which generates nitrous oxide; newer routes use catalytic oxygen processes or bio-based fermentations.

  3. Is adipic acid polar or nonpolar?

    Polar, due to its two carboxylic acid groups (though its six‑carbon chain makes it less polar than shorter dicarboxylic acids).

  4. Is adipic acid soluble in water?

    Sparingly soluble in cold water (about 1.5 g/100 mL at ~25°C), with solubility increasing substantially at higher temperatures.

  5. (3) could you substitute adipoyl chloride with adipic acid in this reaction? explain why or why not?

    Not directly—acid chlorides are far more reactive acylating agents, so adipoyl chloride reacts with amines at mild conditions, whereas adipic acid generally requires activation (e.g., conversion to the acid chloride/anhydride or use of coupling/dehydrating agents) or high‑temperature condensation.

  1. Girlsdoporn e359 who?

    This appears unrelated to the food additive E359; E359 is ammonium adipate, an acidity regulator and buffering agent used in some foods.

  2. How do i change the spark plugs on a 1987 ford e359 7.5l?

    Unrelated to food additive E359; E359 is ammonium adipate, a salt of adipic acid used to regulate acidity and stabilize pH in foods.

  3. How is ammonium adipate used in food?

    It acts as an acidity regulator and buffering agent to control pH in products like powdered mixes, beverages, and processed foods. Where permitted, its use is regulated, and JECFA has set an ADI of 0–5 mg/kg body weight per day for adipic acid and its salts.

  4. How to adjust cluth on ford e359 4/4?

    That topic isn’t related to the additive E359; in food, E359 is ammonium adipate used to regulate acidity and maintain pH.

  5. How to change fuel injector of 1997 ford e359 econoline?

    This is unrelated to E359 as a food additive; E359 denotes ammonium adipate, an acidity regulator and buffering agent in foods.