Comparing E433 - Polyoxyethylene sorbitan monooleate vs E487 - sodium dodecyl sulfate

Synonyms
E433
Polyoxyethylene sorbitan monooleate
Polysorbate 80
E487
sodium dodecyl sulfate
sodium laurilsulfate
sodium lauryl sulfate
NaDS
Products

Found in 5,529 products

Found in 165 products

Search rank & volume
#10818.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1815.7K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.48
under-aware

×4.95
over-aware

Search volume over time

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

Interest over time for 4 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Is polysorbate 80 safe?

    Yes—at approved levels it’s considered safe by regulators such as the FDA and EFSA, which set an ADI of 0–25 mg/kg body weight/day. Rare hypersensitivity reactions have been reported, and very high doses may cause gastrointestinal upset.

  2. What is polysorbate 80 used for?

    It’s an emulsifier and stabilizer that helps oil and water mix, prevents separation, and improves texture. In foods it stabilizes flavors and colors and improves whipping and melt resistance in products like ice cream.

  3. Is polysorbate 80 bad for you?

    Not at typical food-use levels: it’s permitted with safety limits and isn’t linked to harm for the general population. Some people may be sensitive, and effects seen in animals at high doses are well above normal dietary exposure.

  4. Is polysorbate 80 natural?

    No. It’s a synthetic ingredient made from sorbitan (from sorbitol) reacted with ethylene oxide and oleic acid that can be sourced from plants or animals.

  5. What foods contain polysorbate 80?

    It’s commonly found in ice cream and other frozen desserts, salad dressings and sauces, flavored beverages and coffee creamers, whipped toppings, and some bakery mixes, icings, and confectionery.

  1. What are nads used for?

    NaDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate, E487) is used in some foods as an anionic surfactant—primarily as a foaming/whipping agent, emulsifier, and wetting agent; it’s more commonly found in personal-care and cleaning products.

  2. What do nads do?

    It lowers surface tension so ingredients mix and foam more easily, helping disperse fats and improve whipping volume and texture in certain foods.

  3. What are nads good for?

    Creating and stabilizing foam, aiding emulsification, and improving wetting/dispersion of powders or oils in food formulations.

  4. What does nads mean?

    NaDS stands for sodium dodecyl sulfate (also called sodium lauryl sulfate), the food additive E487.

  5. What is nads supplement?

    There isn’t a NaDS supplement—it's not a nutrient; when present, NaDS is used as a technological food additive (surfactant), not for health benefits.