Comparing E625 - Magnesium diglutamate vs E620 - Glutamic acid

Synonyms
E625
Magnesium diglutamate
E620
Glutamic acid
L-Glutamic acid
Products

Found in 2 products

Found in 115 products

Search rank & volume
#424100 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1716.8K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×2.80
over-aware

×8.26
over-aware

Search volume over time

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

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

Popular questions
  1. E625 cooling fan how to replace?

    E625 is magnesium diglutamate, a glutamate-based flavor enhancer used in foods; it isn’t a device, so there’s no cooling fan to replace.

  2. How to disassemble an emachines e625?

    E625 here refers to magnesium diglutamate (a food additive), not an eMachines laptop model, so disassembly instructions don’t apply.

  3. How to factory reset emachines e625?

    E625 is the E-number for magnesium diglutamate, a flavor enhancer similar to MSG, and it has no relation to computer factory resets.

  4. How to fix black screen in emachines e625?

    E625 denotes magnesium diglutamate, a permitted food flavor enhancer; it isn’t associated with laptop display issues.

  5. How to hook up external moniter on emachines e625?

    E625 is a food additive (magnesium diglutamate) used to enhance savory taste, not a laptop model, so monitor setup is unrelated.

  1. Is glutamic acid the same as glutamine?

    No. Glutamic acid (E620) is an amino acid, while glutamine is its amide derivative; they’re related but chemically distinct and serve different roles.

  2. Is glutamate the same as glutamic acid?

    They’re the deprotonated (glutamate) and protonated (glutamic acid, E620) forms of the same molecule; at typical physiological and food pH, glutamate predominates.

  3. Is glutamic acid acidic or basic?

    Acidic—glutamic acid has two carboxyl groups and is largely present as its negatively charged form (glutamate) at neutral pH.

  4. Is glutamic acid the same as glutamate?

    Yes—glutamate is the ionized form of glutamic acid (E620); which term is used depends on pH or whether it’s in a salt (e.g., MSG).

  5. Are glutamate and glutamic acid the same?

    Yes—they refer to the same substance in different forms: glutamic acid is the acid, and glutamate is its anion or salt.