Comparing E501 - Potassium carbonates vs E530 - Magnesium oxide

Synonyms
E501
Potassium carbonates
E530
Magnesium oxide
magnesia
Products

Found in 1,085 products

Found in 40 products

Search rank & volume
#394160 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1797.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.03
under-aware

×315.30
over-aware

Search volume over time

Search history data is not available.

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Flake8 e501 line too long how to fix?

    In food labeling, E501 refers to potassium carbonates, a permitted pH regulator/stabiliser; there's nothing to fix, but you can avoid it by choosing products without E501 on the label.

  2. How does potassium carbonates structure allow it to perform its function?

    As an ionic salt (K2CO3/KHCO3), it dissociates in water to potassium and carbonate/bicarbonate ions, creating alkalinity and buffering pH. The carbonate reacts with acids to release CO2, aiding leavening and stabilizing textures.

  3. How to avoid e501 line too long?

    To avoid E501 in foods, check ingredient lists and pick products labeled additive‑free or without potassium carbonates. In recipes, use alternatives like sodium bicarbonate (E500), baking powder, or yeast depending on the application.

  4. How to fix e501 errors?

    If a recipe tastes overly alkaline from potassium carbonates, reduce the amount and balance with an acid (e.g., cream of tartar, lemon juice, or acidic dairy), or substitute a milder leavening/pH regulator like baking powder.

  5. How to fix e501 errorsi n python?

    E501 in food labeling is potassium carbonates, an approved pH regulator/stabiliser; if you meant the Python lint rule E501, that’s unrelated to food additives.

  1. What is magnesium oxide good for?

    In foods, E530 is good for keeping powders free‑flowing (anti‑caking) and helping control acidity/alkalinity (pH); it may also serve as a source of magnesium in fortification.

  2. What is magnesium oxide used for?

    As a food additive it’s used in products like table salt, spices, cocoa, and drink or baking mixes to prevent clumping and to adjust pH; it can also supply magnesium in some fortified foods.

  3. What is magnesium oxide 400 mg used for?

    That tablet dose is a dietary supplement, not a food‑additive use; 400 mg MgO provides about 240 mg elemental magnesium and is used to address low magnesium or as an antacid/laxative, though it’s relatively poorly absorbed and can cause diarrhea at high doses.

  4. Is magnesium oxide good for you?

    At the small amounts used in foods, it’s considered safe (permitted in the EU as E530 and GRAS in the U.S.); as a supplement it can help correct deficiency but has lower bioavailability than some forms and high doses may upset the stomach or cause diarrhea.

  5. What does magnesium oxide do?

    In foods it prevents caking and helps stabilize pH, and can contribute magnesium for fortification.