aspirin
Aspartame itself is a compound, but if a sweetener contains it it is a mixture.
can you tell me if sweetex contains ASPARTAME many thanks Bill
No. Lactose is a sugar and contains calories.
Aspartame (C14H18N2O5) contains two nitrogen atoms per molecule. To find the number of nitrogen atoms in 1.2 g of aspartame, we first calculate the molar mass of aspartame, which is approximately 294.3 g/mol. Then, we determine the number of moles in 1.2 g of aspartame (1.2 g / 294.3 g/mol ≈ 0.00407 moles). Since each mole of aspartame contains 2 moles of nitrogen atoms, this results in approximately 0.00814 moles of nitrogen atoms, or about 4.9 x 10^21 nitrogen atoms.
Diet Pepsi contains 5.9 mg Aspartame per fluid ounce.
Aspartame is sold in the US as Nutrasweet and Equal. Sweet N' Low is saccharine. Splenda is sucralose.
The Hermesetas website says that Hermesetas Gold DOES contain a blend of ASPARTAME and something else! So it issomething to weigh up when considering the question of just what products contain apartame.
39 sigma and 6 pi bonds
Yes, aspartame is present in Diet Coke, not regular Coke. Regular Coke contains high fructose corn syrup as its sweetener.
Aspartame contains approximately 10% methanol by weight. When aspartame is metabolized in the body, it breaks down into its constituent parts, which include methanol, phenylalanine, and aspartic acid. However, the amount of methanol produced from aspartame consumption is considered to be low and generally regarded as safe by health authorities.
Regular coke contains sucrose as a sweetener. Sucrose is more dense than water, and so it sinks. Diet coke doesn't sink because it contains aspartame as a sweetener. Aspartame is less dense than water.
To find the number of hydrogen atoms in 2.43 g of aspartame, calculate the number of moles of aspartame using its molar mass. Aspartame has a molar mass of 294.3 g/mol. Then, determine the number of moles of hydrogen atoms in one molecule of aspartame (the chemical formula of aspartame is C14H18N2O5). Finally, multiply the number of moles of aspartame by the number of moles of hydrogen atoms to find the total number of hydrogen atoms in 2.43 g of aspartame.