Comparing E422 - Glycerol vs E1505 - Triethyl citrate

Synonyms
E422
Glycerol
Glycerin
Glycerine
vegetable glycerine
E1505
Triethyl citrate
triethyl 2-hydroxypropane-1‚2‚3-tricarboxylate
Products

Found in 12,762 products

Found in 194 products

Search rank & volume
#5167.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2481.8K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×1.91
over-aware

×1.35
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 5 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. What is vegetable glycerin?

    Vegetable glycerin is glycerol (E422) derived from plant oils (e.g., soybean, palm, coconut); it’s chemically identical to other glycerin and commonly used as a humectant and sweetener.

  2. Is glycerin bad for you?

    Generally no—at typical food and cosmetic levels it’s considered safe (FDA GRAS; EFSA found no safety concern at reported uses); large amounts may cause bloating, diarrhea, or thirst.

  3. Is glycerin good for your skin?

    Yes—glycerin is a humectant that draws and holds water in the outer skin layers, helping hydration and barrier function; very high, undiluted use can feel sticky or occasionally irritate.

  4. What is glycerin used for?

    In foods it works as a humectant, mild sweetener, thickener, and solvent/carrier for flavors and colors to keep products moist and stable; it’s also used in pharmaceuticals and personal care as a moisturizer, solvent, and plasticizer.

  5. What is glycerin made of?

    It’s most often produced by hydrolysis, saponification, or transesterification of natural triglycerides from plant or animal fats; it can also be made by microbial fermentation of sugars or synthetically from petrochemical routes.

  1. What is triethyl citrate oil?

    Triethyl citrate (E1505) is a colorless, odorless liquid ester of citric acid used in foods as an emulsifier, stabilizer, carrier, and whipping aid (especially for egg whites). It's sometimes called an “oil” because it feels oily, but chemically it's an ester, not a fatty oil.

  2. How to open dell inspiron e1505?

    E1505 in food labeling refers to triethyl citrate, a food emulsifier/stabilizer, and is unrelated to opening a Dell Inspiron E1505 laptop.

  3. How to replace dell e1505 keyboard?

    E1505 refers to triethyl citrate, a food additive, and is not related to replacing a Dell E1505 keyboard.

  4. Dell e1505 not charging when plugged in?

    E1505 is triethyl citrate, a food additive, and has no connection to charging issues with a Dell E1505 laptop.

  5. How can i reinstall windows 7 if i forgot my password on a dell inspiron e1505?

    E1505 is triethyl citrate, a food additive, and is unrelated to reinstalling Windows on a Dell Inspiron E1505.