Comparing E414 - Acacia gum vs E462 - Ethyl cellulose

Synonyms
E414
Acacia gum
gum arabic
gum acacia
arabic gum
Gum arabic
E-414
E 414
INS414
INS 414
E462
Ethyl cellulose
Ethylcellulose
Products

Found in 12,914 products

Found in 21 products

Search rank & volume
#10119.4K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#324470 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.22
under-aware

×2.83
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 9 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

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

Popular questions
  1. Is gum arabic bad for you?

    No—gum arabic (E414) is considered safe at permitted levels; it is GRAS in the U.S. and EFSA found no safety concern at current uses. Large amounts may cause gas or bloating, and allergic reactions are rare.

  2. Is acacia gum bad for you?

    No—acacia gum (gum arabic, E414) is generally safe; JECFA set an ADI 'not specified,' indicating very low toxicity. Excessive intake can cause mild digestive discomfort.

  3. Is gum arabic vegan?

    Yes—it's a plant-derived sap from acacia trees with no animal-derived ingredients, so it is considered vegan.

  4. Is gum arabic gluten free?

    Yes—it's naturally gluten-free; pure gum arabic contains no wheat, barley, or rye, though manufacturing cross-contamination is possible.

  5. What is gum arabic used for?

    It functions as an emulsifier, stabilizer, thickener, and carrier—commonly used in soft-drink flavor emulsions, confectionery (gummies, glazes), bakery icings, and for encapsulating flavors.

  1. Ethyl cellulose is which type of polymer?

    Ethyl cellulose is a cellulose ether—a nonionic, thermoplastic polysaccharide derivative in which some hydroxyl groups of cellulose are replaced by ethyl groups.

  2. How is ethyl cellulose made?

    It’s made by reacting purified cellulose with ethylating agents (commonly under alkaline conditions) to form ethyl ethers, then washing and drying; the degree of substitution is controlled to tune its properties.

  3. How safe is ethyl cellulose?

    It is considered safe as a food additive; JECFA assigned an ADI “not specified” and EFSA found no safety concern at reported uses, with minimal absorption and mainly GI passage—very high intakes may cause mild stomach upset.

  4. How to make ethyl cellulose?

    Industrially, it is produced by alkaline ethylation of cellulose using hazardous ethylating agents under controlled conditions; it isn’t practical or safe to make at home.

  5. How to make gunge slime ethylcellulose?

    Ethyl cellulose is not water‑soluble, so it won’t make typical water‑based “gunge” slime; for a food-safe slime, use water‑soluble gums like xanthan (E415) or guar (E412) instead.