"Descrizione" by FCS777 (5566 pt) | 2023-Nov-26 11:53 |
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Sorbitol is a chemical compound, a six-carbon-atom sugar alcohol obtained chemically from purified glucose by hydrogenation. In the human body, it oxidises to fructose after consumption, but it does not affect blood sugar or uric sugar and can therefore be used as a sweetener for diabetics.
Due to its chemical structure, sorbitol is less caloric compared to sucrose and has a minimal impact on blood sugar levels, making it useful in products intended for people with diabetes or those seeking low-calorie alternatives.
Description of Raw Materials
Sorbitol is a polyol (sugar alcohol) commonly used as a sweetener and humectant in many food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic products. The main raw materials for its production are:
Glucose: Derived mainly from corn starch, glucose is the starting point for sorbitol synthesis. It is a monosaccharide that serves as the base molecule for the reduction reaction.
Hydrogen: Used in the hydrogenation process, hydrogen reacts with glucose to form sorbitol.
Industrial Chemical Synthesis
It occurs as a fine white powder or white crystals.
What it is used for and where
It is used as a raw material by fermentation and chemical synthesis to produce vitamin C. In addition to its moisturising sweetening effect, sorbitol has chelating, stabilising and moistening properties, particularly in toothpastes, cosmetics and tobacco.
Food
Labelled as E420 sweetener in the European list of food additives, sorbitol is found naturally in fruits such as pears, apples, cherries, sorbs, plums, etc., but is made industrially from glucose using a chemical process.
It is an artificial sweetener, widely used in food and pharmaceutical production for its sweetening properties.
Food sector.
Pharmaceutical
Bulking agent in pharmaceutical products. ‘Bulking agents’ are substances which contribute to the volume of a foodstuff without contributing significantly to its available energy value (1).
Cosmetics
In cosmetic products, it has the function of retaining water and is also used as fragrance, humectant, skin conditioning, thickener, flow agent.
Fragrance. It plays a very important role in the formulation of cosmetic products as it allows perfume to be enhanced, masked or added to the final product, improving its commercial viability. The consumer always expects to find a pleasant scent in a cosmetic product.
Humectant. Hygroscopic compound used to minimise water loss in the skin and to prevent it from drying out by facilitating faster and greater absorption of water into the stratum corneum of the epidermis. The epidermis is the most superficial of the three layers that make up human skin (epidermis, dermis and hypodermis) and is the layer that maintains hydration in all three layers. In turn, the epidermis is composed of five layers: horny, the most superficial, granular, spinous, shiny, and basal. Humectants have the ability to retain the water they attract from the air in the stratum corneum and have the function of moisturising the skin. They are best used before emollients, which are oil-based.
Skin conditioning agent. An ingredient that is the mainstay of topical skin treatment by restoring, increasing or improving skin tolerance to external factors, including melanocyte tolerance. The most important function of the conditioning agent is to prevent skin dehydration, but the subject is rather complex and involves emollients and humectants.
Contraindications:
Diarrhea if the dose exceeds 40gr per day
Can give various intestinal disorders
Typical optimal characteristics of Sorbitol as a commercial product
Appearance | Fine white powder or white crystals |
Boiling Point | 494.9±0.0 °C at 760 mmHg |
Melting Point | 95-99ºC |
Flash Point | 292.5±23.3 °C |
Density | 1.6±0.1 g/cm3 |
Relative density (20℃) g/ml | 1.3051 |
pH | 6.88 |
Total sugars % | ≤ 0.3 |
Reducing sugars % | ≤ 0.21 |
Burned residues % | ≤ 0.1 |
Heavy metal % | ≤ 0.0005 |
Nickle % | ≤ 0.0002 |
Arsenic % | ≤ 0.0002 |
Chloride % | ≤ 0.001 |
Sulfate % | ≤ 0.005 |
Coli | Absent in 1g |
Total bacteria cfu/g | ≤100 |
References____________________________________________________________
(1) Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2008 on food additives (Text with EEA relevance) OJ L 354, 31.12.2008, p. 16–33 (BG, ES, CS, DA, DE, ET, EL, EN, FR, GA, IT, LV, LT, HU, MT, NL, PL, PT, RO, SK, SL, FI, SV)
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