| Literature DB >> 33936216 |
Ab Qayoom Naik1, Tabassum Zafar1, Vinoy Kumar Shrivastava1.
Abstract
Artificial sweeteners are posing a new threat to the environment. The water ecosystem is the primary recipient of these emerging contaminants. Once ingested, sufficient amount of these artificial sweeteners escape unchanged from the human body and are added to the environment. However, some are added in the form of their breakdown products through excretion. Artificial sweeteners are resistant to wastewater treatment processes and are therefore continuously introduced into the water environments. However, the environmental behavior, fate, and long-term ecotoxicological contributions of artificial sweeteners in our water resources still remain largely unknown. Some artificial sweeteners like saccharin are used as a food additive in animal feeds. It also forms the degradation product of the sulfonylurea herbicides. All artificial sweeteners enter into the wastewater treatment plants from the industries and households. From the effluents, they finally reside into the receiving environmental bodies including wastewaters, groundwaters, and surface waters. The global production of these sweeteners is several hundred tons annually and is continuously being added into the environment.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33936216 PMCID: PMC8060115 DOI: 10.1155/2021/6624569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Public Health ISSN: 1687-9805
Maximum permissible limit of various artificial sweeteners approved by FSSAI.
| Artificial sweetener | Food article | Maximum limit (ppm) |
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| Sodium saccharin | Carbonated water | 100 |
| Soft drink concentrate | 100 | |
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| Aspartame | Carbonated water | 700 |
| Soft drink concentrate | 700 | |
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| Sucralose | Carbonated water | 300 |
| Soft drink concentrate | 300 | |
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| Acesulfame-K | Carbonated water | 300 |
| Soft drink concentrate | 300 | |
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| Neotame | Carbonated water | 33 |
| Soft drink concentrate | 33 | |
Source. Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Food Standards Authority of India; Notification No. 01 of August 2011.
Physical and chemical characteristics of most widely used artificial sweeteners and their main markets worldwide.
| Artificial sweetener | Brand/trade name | Main market | Chemical formula | ADI (g/kg/day) | Sweetening potential | Uses | Molar mass (g/mol) | Density (g/cm3) | Year of approval | Reference |
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| ASP | NutraSweet Equal | North America, Europe, Asia | C14H18N2O5 | 40 | 200 | Foods and beverages, pharmaceuticals, etc. | 294.3 | 1.347 | 1981 | Whitehouse et al., 2008 [ |
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| SAC | Sweet'N Low, Sweet Twin, Necta Sweet | America, Europe, Asia | C7H5NO3 | 5 | 300 | Soft drinks, tabletop sweeteners, and desserts | 183.2 | 0.83 | 1985 | Walter [ |
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| ACE | Sunett | North America, Europe, Asia | C4H4KNO4S | 15 | 200 | Table-top sweeteners, beverages, dairy products, confectionery, oral hygiene products, and pharmaceuticals | 163.15 | 1.83 | 1988 | Kuhn [ |
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| NEO | Neotame | America | C20H24N2O5 | 0.3 | 7000 | Carbonated soft drinks, yogurts, cakes, drink powders, etc. | 378.46 | 1.13 | 2002 | Nabors [ |
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| SUC | Splenda | North America | C12H19Cl3O8 | 5 | 6000 | Diet foods and beverages | 397.64 | 1.69 | 1998 | Spillane [ |
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| ALT | Aclame | Australia, Mexico, New Zealand, China | C14H25N3O4S | 1 | 2000 | Bakery products, snack foods, candies and confectionery, ice cream, and frozen dairy products | 331.43 | Not approved by FDA, thus not used in USA and EU | Feng 2016 et al., 2013 [ | |
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| CYC | Twin Sweet | Europe, Asia | C6H12NNaO3S | 7 | 30 | Baked goods, confections, desserts, soft drinks, preserves, and salad dressings | 201.22 | 0.7 | 1984 banned in USA since 1970 | Lange et al., 2012 [ |
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| NHDC | Europe, Japan | C28H36O15 | 5 | 1900 | Flavoring agent or adjuvant, foods including condiments and seasonings, beverage, and pharmaceuticals | 612.6 | 1.6 | 1994 | Lange et al. [ | |
Molecular structures of the most widely used artificial sweeteners and a new class of emerging pollutants.
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Molecular structures were redrawn using Chemdraw®.
Figure 1Flow chart showing emerging contaminants, sources, and their end points.