Comparing E290 - Carbon dioxide vs E948 - Oxygen

Synonyms
E290
Carbon dioxide
Carbonic acid gas
Fermentation carbon dioxide
Spring carbon dioxide
E948
Oxygen
element 8
Products

Found in 983 products

Found in 8 products

Search rank & volume
#12112.6K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#1897K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×16.66
over-aware

×1090.87
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 6 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. How to treat low carbon dioxide in blood?

    Low CO2 (bicarbonate) on a blood test reflects an acid-base imbalance, so treatment targets the underlying cause—such as correcting metabolic acidosis, adjusting ventilation, or managing kidney issues—under medical supervision. Drinking carbonated beverages or ingesting E290 does not correct it.

  2. Is carbon dioxide a compound?

    Yes—CO2 is a chemical compound consisting of one carbon atom covalently bonded to two oxygen atoms.

  3. Is carbon dioxide a pure substance?

    Pure CO2 is a single chemical substance. Food-grade E290 is highly purified CO2 that meets strict identity and impurity limits before it is used in beverages or modified-atmosphere packaging.

  4. Is carbon dioxide bad for you?

    At typical levels in foods and carbonated drinks, CO2 is considered safe; it is permitted as E290 in the EU and GRAS in the U.S. Hazards arise from breathing very high concentrations (which can displace oxygen) or improper handling of liquid CO2 or dry ice.

  5. Where does carbon dioxide come from?

    Suppliers capture CO2 from natural wells, fermentation (e.g., breweries, bioethanol plants), or industrial off-gases, then purify, liquefy, and repackage it for food-grade uses like carbonation and protective atmospheres.

  1. What is a dangerously low oxygen level?

    In air, an oxygen concentration below 19.5% by volume is considered oxygen-deficient and hazardous; in blood, an SpO2 below about 90% (or arterial PaO2 <60 mmHg) is dangerously low and needs urgent medical care.

  2. How many valence electrons does oxygen have?

    Oxygen has six valence electrons.

  3. How to increase blood oxygen level?

    If your level is low or you have symptoms (e.g., shortness of breath, bluish lips), seek urgent medical care; improving ventilation, sitting upright, slow deep breathing, and treating underlying causes can help, while supplemental oxygen should only be used under medical supervision.

  4. How much oxygen is in the air?

    About 21% of dry air by volume is oxygen (most of the rest is nitrogen).

  5. How many electrons does oxygen have?

    A neutral oxygen atom has 8 electrons.