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| Chemical name | } | |
| Chemical formula | } | |
| Molecular mass | } g/mol | |
| CAS number | * | |
| HS number | Crude: 1520.00.00 Pure: 2905.45.00 | |
| Density | } g/cm3 | |
| Viscosity | } Pa.s | |
| Melting point | } °C | |
| Boiling point | } °C | |
| Food energy | 4.32 kcal/g | |
| SMILES | } | |
| Chemical infobox | ||
A byproduct of saponification and transesterification to obtain biodiesel, this is produced by hydrolysis of three ester linkages and loss of three equivalents of fatty acid from fat or biological oil.
Fats and oils are insoluble in water, because the OH groups of glycerol are replaced by ester groups. They are hydrophobic.
As a byproduct of biodiesel production, each of the OH sites in HO-CH2-CH(-OH)-CH2-OH is one of the three places where a fatty acid chain is broken off the triglyceride molecule.
See: transesterification.
Like biodiesel by-product, the purification of the lower glycerol phase involves: neutralisation, separation of unreacted methanol, dilution with wash liquid stream coming from methylester washing, splitting of soaps and final concentration up to 80%. Partially refined glycerol can be delivered as such to specialized distillers.
Feedstock pre-treatment and upgrading of glycerol to pharmaceutical grade (>99.7%) can be optionally implemented within the biodiesel factory itself.
When used in food, care should be taken to use only pure vegetable glycerol that is specifically labeled for use in food. "External use only" warnings should be heeded.
When used as an emollient, glycerol should never be applied undiluted to the skin. The same powerful hygroscopic property that draws moisture out of the air to moisten the skin will draw moisture out of the skin if the glycerol is too concentrated. A minimum of two or three parts water should be added to one part glycerol.
Glycerol has approximately 27 food calories per teaspoon and is 60% as sweet as sucrose. Although it has about the same food energy as table sugar, it does not raise blood sugar levels, nor does it feed the bacteria that form plaques and cause dental cavities. Glycerol should not be consumed undiluted, as unhydrated glycerol will draw water from tissues, causing blistering in the mouth and gastric distress. As food additive, glycerol is also known as E number E422.
See also: oleochemicals.
Alcohols | Food additives | Personal lubricants | Household chemicals | Cosmetic chemicals | Solvents | Laxatives
Glycerol | Glycerin | Glycerin | Glicerol | Glicerino | Glycérol | Glicerol | Glýseról | Glicerolo | גליצרול | Glicerīns | Glycerol | Glycerine | グリセリン | Gliceryna | Glicerina | Глицерин | Glyseroli | Propantriol | 丙三醇
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It uses material from the
"Glycerol".
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