Image Name
Anhydrous citric acid
Anhydrous citric acid
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  • Anhydrous citric acid
  • Anhydrous citric acid

Anhydrous citric acid

The company strictly follows the "GMP for Pharmaceutical Excipients" in production. It currently has approvals for 30 pharmaceutical excipients, including Potassium Chloride, Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate, Anhydrous Disodium Hydrogen Phosphate, Anhydrous Sodium Carbonate, Disodium Hydrogen Phosphate, Magnesium Chloride, Potassium Sorbate, Mannitol, Urea, Sodium Citrate, Calcium Chloride, Span 40, Glycerol, Cross-linked Polyvinylpyrrolidone, Chitosan, PEG400, Hydroxypropyl Methylcellulose, Microcrystalline Cellulose, Low-substituted Hydroxypropyl Cellulose, Sucrose (Sucrose Powder), Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate, Anhydrous Citric Acid, Calcium Carbonate, Light Magnesium Oxide, Tween 80, Fructose, Taurine, Dipotassium Hydrogen Phosphate, and Sodium Glutamate.

Also known as anhydrous citric acid, chemical name: 2-hydroxypropane-1,2,3-tricarboxylic acid. It is a colorless translucent crystal, white granule or white crystalline powder; odorless, with a very sour taste; its aqueous solution shows an acidic reaction. It is slightly efflorescent in dry air; it is very easily soluble in water, easily soluble in ethanol, and slightly soluble in ether.

Category: Product Center

Keyword: Pharmaceutical


Product Parameters

Packaging specifications: 25kg/bag Storage: Store in a sealed container

Also known as: Anhydrous citric acid, Chemical name: 2-hydroxypropane-1,2,3-tricarboxylic acid. It is a colorless translucent crystal, white granule or white crystalline powder; odorless, extremely sour taste; aqueous solution shows acidic reaction. It is slightly efflorescent in dry air; it is very easily soluble in water, easily soluble in ethanol, and slightly soluble in ether.

It is often used as a buffer, pH adjuster, flavoring agent, stabilizer, excipient, disintegrant, etc., for oral, intravenous, ophthalmic, ear, nose, inhalation, and general external use.

Incompatibility: Citric acid is incompatible with potassium bitartrate, alkali metals, alkaline earth metal carbonates, bicarbonates, acetates and sulfides, and is also incompatible with oxidizing agents, halogens, reducing agents, and nitrates. It may explode when encountering nitrate metal salts. During storage, sucrose can crystallize out of citric acid syrup.

 

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