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What is silicon dioxide, silica matting agent?

2024-05-21

What is silicon dioxide?

Silicon dioxide, also known as silica or SiO2, is a naturally occurring compound. It's made of silicon and oxygen. Both elements are abundant on our planet. If you've held a rock or touched sand, you've encountered silicon dioxide.

In fact, our bodies use silica to support the development of our bones, connective tissues, and more.

Silicon dioxide used as an ingredient may be labeled as silica, silicon dioxide, synthetic amorphous silica (SAS), or E551.

Where do we find silicon dioxide?

We find silicon dioxide naturally in many foods and beverages. For exampleSubscribe for weekly updates_ go.msu.edu/cris-connect

  • Bananas
  • Eggs
  • Fish
  • Grains
  • Green beans
  • Leafy greens
  • Milk
  • Water

We find silicon dioxide added to foods and products. For example

  • Salt
  • Spices
  • Sugar
  • Cosmetics (e.g., powders)

Why is silicon dioxide added to foods and products?

Silicon dioxide works as an anti-caking agent, and manufacturers add small amounts to some foods, cosmetics, and more to prevent products from clumping and binding together.

Why do we need anti-caking agents like silicon dioxide?

Many foods and products readily absorb water or oils. The absorption of this water or oil can cause products to clump together and, in some cases, become unusable. Clumping is especially troublesome for cake mixes, flour, sugar, table salt, and many other granular food products with crystalline structures.

When these crystalline structures absorb water or oils, they can create a liquid bridge that forms into a crystal bridge. This crystal bridge binds the food product together, making it difficult to use.

You may have noticed that some restaurants add rice to the salt in their salt shaker, or maybe you've seen people add rice to brown sugar. Adding rice to an ingredient is a low-cost and small-scale way of adding additional clumping protection to foods because the rice absorbs excess moisture and protects the foods from the above clumping process.

Manufacturers add small amounts of anti-caking agents like silicon dioxide to products they want to keep free-flowing. These anti-caking agents coat individual particles, thus separating the particles from each other so a crystal bridge does not form and cause clumping.


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