Comparing E905 - Synthetic wax vs E905A - mineral oil

Synonyms
E905
Synthetic wax
Hydrocarbon wax
Fischer-Tropsch wax
E905a
mineral oil
Products

Found in 1,468 products

Found in 1,401 products

Search rank & volume
#317510 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#6446K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.05
under-aware

×4.78
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 4 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 synthetic wax made of?

    E905 synthetic wax (microcrystalline/Fischer–Tropsch wax) is made of high–molecular‑weight saturated hydrocarbons—mainly branched isoparaffins and naphthenes—derived from petroleum refining or synthesis.

  2. How to remove candle wax from synthetic material?

    Let it harden, gently scrape off the excess, then sandwich the spot with paper towels and apply a warm iron to draw out the wax; treat any oily residue from paraffin/E905‑type waxes with dish soap or isopropyl alcohol before washing per the care label.

  3. What is synthetic wax in cosmetics?

    In cosmetics, E905‑type synthetic (microcrystalline) wax is a petroleum‑derived hydrocarbon wax used to thicken, structure, and add gloss or pay‑off to balms, sticks, and creams; highly refined grades are widely considered safe for topical use.

  4. Candles contain parafin wax, a hydrocarbon. when a test tube filled with cold water?

    Holding a cold test tube above a burning paraffin (E905‑type) wax candle causes water vapor from combustion to condense on it, and soot may deposit if combustion is incomplete; the flame’s main products are CO2 and H2O.

  5. Dia what does e905 mean\?

    E905 is the additive code for mineral hydrocarbon waxes (e.g., microcrystalline/paraffin/petrolatum) used mainly as glazing and release agents on foods; in some countries you may see subcodes (E905a–c) distinguishing specific types.

  1. What is mineral oil used for?

    E905a mineral oil serves as a glazing and release agent in foods, keeps processing equipment lubricated, and appears in personal-care, pharmaceutical, and industrial products as a moisture-sealing or friction-reducing ingredient.

  2. Is mineral oil safe for skin?

    Refined cosmetic- or pharmaceutical-grade mineral oil is considered non-comedogenic and generally safe for most skin types, acting as an occlusive to reduce transepidermal water loss, though sensitive users can experience clogged pores or folliculitis.

  3. Is mineral oil edible?

    Food-grade mineral oil is approved for limited ingestion—such as functioning as a laxative or as the glazing agent E905a—provided intake stays within regulatory limits; industrial grades without purification are not safe to consume.

  4. Is mineral oil a laxative?

    Yes—oral and enema forms of mineral oil act as lubricant laxatives that soften stool and ease passage, though they are typically recommended only for short-term relief because long-term use can interfere with nutrient absorption and bowel function.