Comparing E472E - Mono- and diacetyltartaric acid esters of mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids vs E917 - potassium iodate

Synonyms
E472e
Mono- and diacetyltartaric acid esters of mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids
Mono- and diacetyl tartaric acid esters of mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids
DATEM
Mono- and diacetyltartaric esters of mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids
emulsifier E472e
E917
potassium iodate
Products

Found in 4,448 products

Found in 81 products

Search rank & volume
#2073.6K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#2671.4K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.12
under-aware

×2.45
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 6 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 datem in food?

    DATEM (E472e) is an emulsifier made by reacting mono- and diglycerides of edible fatty acids with tartaric and acetic acids; it strengthens dough, improves loaf volume, and stabilizes emulsions in baked goods and other foods.

  2. Is datem harmful?

    At permitted food levels, DATEM is considered safe by major regulators (EFSA, JECFA, FDA). Some animal studies showed effects only at very high doses far above typical human exposure.

  3. Is datem banned in europe?

    No—DATEM (E472e) is authorized in the EU as a food additive with specified uses and maximum levels.

  4. What is datem ingredient?

    On labels, it appears as “DATEM” or “E472e,” an emulsifier made by esterifying mono- and diglycerides with tartaric and acetic acids. It is typically made from vegetable oils but can also be sourced from animal fats.

  5. Is datem bad for you?

    For most people, no—safety evaluations have found no health concern at permitted use levels. If you avoid animal-derived ingredients, check the source of the fats used.

  1. Is potassium iodate dangerous?

    At permitted food-use levels it’s considered safe, but it’s a strong oxidizer and excessive iodine intake can disturb thyroid function (especially in people with thyroid disease, infants, or during pregnancy). As a pure chemical it can irritate eyes/skin and should be handled with care.

  2. Why is potassium iodate banned?

    In the EU/UK it’s not authorized as a food additive (flour treatment agent) due to safety concerns about excess iodine exposure and lack of technological need; however, some countries still allow limited uses such as salt iodization. Regulations vary by country.

  3. What is potassium iodate used for?

    It’s used as an oxidizing flour improver/dough conditioner in some countries and as a stable iodine source for iodizing table salt.

  4. How does sodium bisulfite and potassium iodate react to make iodine reaction with starch equations?

    In acid, bisulfite first reduces iodate to iodide: IO3− + 3 HSO3− → I− + 3 HSO4−; once bisulfite is consumed, iodate oxidizes iodide to iodine: IO3− + 5 I− + 6 H+ → 3 I2 + 3 H2O; iodine then forms I3− with I− (I2 + I− → I3−), which gives the blue starch–iodine complex.

  5. How much of solid kio3 do you need to make 25.00ml of a 0.20m potassium iodate solution? 1.07 g?

    About 1.07 g KIO3 (0.02500 L × 0.200 mol/L = 0.00500 mol; molar mass ≈ 214 g/mol; mass ≈ 1.07 g).