Comparing E941 - Nitrogen vs E943B - Isobutane

Synonyms
E941
Nitrogen
nitrogen E941
E943b
Isobutane
Products

Found in 79 products

Found in 32 products

Search rank & volume
#4368K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1894.8K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×118.39
over-aware

×19.09
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 3 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. How many valence electrons does nitrogen have?

    Five; a nitrogen atom has 5 valence electrons (2s2 2p3).

  2. What is nitrogen fixation?

    Nitrogen fixation is the conversion of atmospheric N2 (E941) into biologically available forms like ammonia by microbes, lightning, or the industrial Haber–Bosch process.

  3. What is nitrogen used for?

    In foods, E941 is used as an inert propellant and packaging gas to displace oxygen, prevent oxidation, and extend shelf life. Liquid nitrogen is also used for rapid freezing and to create fine bubbles/creamy textures in beverages (e.g., nitro coffee or beer).

  4. Is nitrogen a greenhouse gas?

    No—diatomic nitrogen (N2, E941) is not a greenhouse gas because it does not absorb infrared radiation; nitrous oxide (N2O, E942) is.

  5. What is the nitrogen cycle?

    The nitrogen cycle is the movement of nitrogen among the atmosphere, soils, water, and living organisms. It includes fixation of N2 (E941) into reactive forms, biological uptake, and return to N2 via processes like denitrification.

  1. How do the global warming potentials of isobutane?

    Isobutane (R-600a) has a very low GWP—about 3 over 100 years and roughly 10 over 20 years (values vary slightly by IPCC assessment). That’s far lower than many HFC propellants, and its ozone-depletion potential is 0.

  2. What is isobutane used for?

    As food additive E943b, it’s used as a propellant/expellant gas in aerosols like whipped cream and cooking sprays. Beyond foods, it’s also used as a refrigerant (R-600a), a fuel for lighters/camping stoves, and a foam-blowing agent.

  3. What is the difference between butane and isobutane?

    They’re structural isomers: n-butane (E943a) is straight-chain, while isobutane (E943b) is branched. Isobutane’s lower boiling point gives higher vapor pressure and better cold-weather performance; both are highly flammable gases used as propellants.

  4. How do global warming potentials of isobutane?

    On a 100‑year basis, isobutane’s GWP is about 3; on a 20‑year basis it’s roughly 10, depending on the IPCC report cited. These values are very low compared with common HFC propellants, and its ODP is 0.

  5. How long do isobutane canisters last?

    Run time depends on canister size and stove output; a typical 230 g canister fuels about 1.5–3 hours at moderate heat (less in cold or high power). Unopened canisters keep for many years if stored cool and dry; always follow the manufacturer’s guidance.