Comparing E422 - Glycerol vs E1510 - Ethanol

Synonyms
E422
Glycerol
Glycerin
Glycerine
vegetable glycerine
E1510
Ethanol
ethyl alcohol
Methylcarbinol
Ethyl hydroxide
Ethyl hydrate
Products

Found in 12,762 products

Found in 918 products

Search rank & volume
#5167.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#3876.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×1.91
over-aware

×12.06
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 5 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. 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. Is ethanol polar?

    Yes—its hydroxyl (-OH) group makes ethanol a polar molecule capable of hydrogen bonding, so it mixes readily with water even though its ethyl tail is nonpolar.

  2. What is ethanol free gas?

    Fuel labeled “ethanol free” or E0 contains no blended ethanol, unlike common E10 gasoline. Some drivers choose it for small engines, boats, or long-term storage to avoid moisture and corrosion issues.

  3. What is ethanol used for?

    Food makers use E1510 as a carrier for flavors, colors, and botanical extracts, and as a processing aid in beverages and tinctures. Beyond foods it serves as a disinfectant, industrial solvent, chemical feedstock, and renewable fuel component.

  4. What is non ethanol gas?

    Non-ethanol gas is another way to describe E0 gasoline—petrol that has not been blended with ethanol. It is favored for equipment sensitive to alcohol fuels.

  5. Who sells ethanol free gas near me?

    Availability depends on location; check for stations or marinas advertising E0 or “ethanol free” pumps, and consult tools such as state fuel registries or community-maintained maps (e.g., pure-gas.org) to find current suppliers nearby.