Comparing E551 - Silicon dioxide vs E556 - Calcium aluminium silicate

Synonyms
E551
Silicon dioxide
Silica
SiO2
E556
Calcium aluminium silicate
Calcium aluminosilicate
Calcium silicoaluminate
Aluminium calcium silicate
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Popular questions
  1. Is silicon dioxide safe?

    Yes—food-grade silicon dioxide (E551), a synthetic amorphous silica used as an anti-caking agent, is permitted by regulators (e.g., FDA GRAS; EFSA found no concern at current uses) at typical food levels. This differs from inhaling crystalline silica dust, which is hazardous.

  2. What happens if you eat silica gel?

    Silica gel is an inert, amorphous silicon dioxide desiccant; if swallowed it usually passes through without being absorbed, though it can cause brief stomach upset or pose a choking risk. Indicator varieties (e.g., cobalt-dyed) aren’t meant to be eaten—seek advice if a child swallows a packet or a large amount.

  3. Is silicon dioxide bad for you?

    Not at the small amounts used in foods—E551 is considered safe and is largely not absorbed by the body. The main risk with silica is from inhaling crystalline silica dust, not ingesting food-grade amorphous silica.

  4. Is silica bad for you?

    In foods, amorphous silica (E551) used as an anti-caking agent is regarded as safe at permitted levels, and most ingested is excreted. Health concerns mainly relate to occupational inhalation of crystalline silica, which is hazardous.

  5. What is silica gel?

    Silica gel is a porous, amorphous form of silicon dioxide used as a desiccant to control moisture in packaging. It isn’t a food ingredient, and “Do not eat” labels are to prevent choking or misuse.

  1. Calcium silicate or sodium silicoaluminate which is worse?

    Both are permitted anti-caking agents with similar safety at legal use levels. Like E556 (calcium aluminium silicate), sodium aluminosilicate (E554) contains aluminium, whereas calcium silicate (E552) does not—so if you want to minimize aluminium exposure, calcium silicate may be preferable.

  2. How to bring thinkpad e556 to factory reset?

    E556 here refers to calcium aluminium silicate, a food additive. For resetting a ThinkPad E556 laptop, please consult Lenovo’s manual or support.

  3. What is hydrated sodium calcium aluminosilicate?

    Hydrated sodium calcium aluminosilicate (often called HSCAS) is a zeolitic aluminosilicate containing sodium and calcium with water of crystallization. It’s related to E556 (calcium aluminium silicate) but is a distinct material used mainly as an anti-caking agent or in animal feed.

  4. What is the e number of calcium aluminosilicate?

    E556.