Comparing E958 - Glycyrrhizin vs E510 - Ammonium chloride

Synonyms
E958
Glycyrrhizin
E510
Ammonium chloride
Products

Found in 7 products

Found in 337 products

Search rank & volume
#305600 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#11117.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×7.72
over-aware

×7.31
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 2 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 much glycyrrhizin in licorice root?

    Dried licorice root typically contains about 2–9% glycyrrhizin by weight, while concentrated licorice extracts can contain roughly 10–25%.

  2. Does red licorice contain glycyrrhizin?

    Usually no—red licorice candy is typically flavored without real licorice and lacks glycyrrhizin unless “licorice extract” (or glycyrrhizin/ammonium glycyrrhizate) appears on the ingredient list.

  3. Glycyrrhizin licorice which one works?

    Glycyrrhizin is the licorice component that provides the characteristic sweetness and the mineralocorticoid-like effects; products labeled DGL (deglycyrrhizinated licorice) have most glycyrrhizin removed and won’t produce those glycyrrhizin-related effects.

  4. How does glycyrrhizin lower potassium?

    It’s metabolized to glycyrrhetinic acid, which inhibits 11β‑HSD2 in the kidney, allowing cortisol to activate mineralocorticoid receptors—this increases sodium retention and potassium loss (hypokalemia).

  5. How much glycyrrhizin in whole foods dgl?

    DGL is processed to remove glycyrrhizin and usually contains only trace amounts (often under 1%, sometimes <0.1%); check the specific product label for its stated glycyrrhizin content.

  1. Is ammonium chloride an acid?

    No; it's a salt (NH4Cl) of a strong acid and a weak base, but its water solutions are mildly acidic (typically around pH 5–6).

  2. Is ammonium chloride soluble in water?

    Yes—ammonium chloride is readily soluble in water, forming a clear, mildly acidic solution.

  3. Is ammonium chloride the same as ammonia?

    No; ammonia is NH3 (a gas/aqueous base), while ammonium chloride is a crystalline salt composed of the ammonium ion (NH4+) and chloride.

  4. What is ammonium chloride used for?

    As a food additive (E510) it serves as an acidity regulator, dough conditioner/yeast nutrient, and provides the characteristic taste in salty licorice; it can also support fermentation in some processes.

  5. Does ammonium chloride kill mold?

    No; it is not used or authorized as an antifungal preservative in foods—its permitted uses are for acidity regulation, processing, and flavoring rather than mold control.