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Methyl cellulose

Methyl cellulose (or methylcellulose) is a compound derived from cellulose. It is sold under a variety of trade names and is used as a thickener and emulsifier in various food and cosmetic products, and also as a bulk-forming laxative. Like cellulose, it is not digestible, non-toxic, and not an allergen. In addition to culinary uses, it is used in arts and crafts such as papier-mâché and is often the main ingredient of wallpaper paste.

Methyl cellulose
Names
Other names
Cellulose, methyl ether; methylated cellulose; methylcellulose; E461
Identifiers
  • 9004-67-5 Y
ChemSpider
  • none
ECHA InfoCard 100.115.188
E number E461 (thickeners, ...)
UNII
  • 4GFU244C4J Y
  • DTXSID1036919
Properties
variable
Molar mass variable
Pharmacology
A06AC06 (WHO)
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

In 2020, it was the 422nd most commonly prescribed medication in the United States, with more than 100,000  prescriptions.[1]

Uses edit

Methyl cellulose has a wide range of uses.

Medical edit

Constipation edit

Methyl cellulose is used to treat constipation and is classified as a bulk forming laxative.[2] It works by increasing the amount of stool present which improves intestinal contractions.[2][3] Effects generally occur within three days.[2] It is taken orally with sufficient water.[3] Side effects may include abdominal pain.[3]

It is available over the counter.[2] It is sold under the brand name Citrucel among others.[2]

Artificial tears and saliva edit

The lubricating property of methylcellulose is of particular benefit in the treatment of dry eyes.[4] Solutions containing methyl cellulose or similar cellulose derivatives are used as substitute for tears or saliva if the natural production of these fluids is disturbed.[citation needed]

Medication manufacturing edit

Methyl cellulose is used in the manufacture of drug capsules; its edible and nontoxic properties provide a vegetarian alternative to the use of gelatin.[citation needed]

Consumer products edit

Thickener and emulsifier edit

Methyl cellulose is occasionally added to hair shampoos, tooth pastes and liquid soaps, to generate their characteristic thick consistency. This is also done for foods, for example ice cream[5] or croquette. Methyl cellulose is also an important emulsifier, preventing the separation of two mixed liquids because it is an emulsion stabilizer.[citation needed]

Food edit

The E number of methyl cellulose as food additive is E461. E464 is hydroxypropyl methylcellulose[6] and more soluble in water.[7]

Methyl cellulose, as a gel, has the unique property of setting when hot and melting when cold.[8]

In some meat analogues that are intended to replicate the texture of meat, methyl cellulose is used as an ingredient, typically in concentrations less than 2%.[9][10][11]

Lubricant edit

Methyl cellulose may be used in personal lubricant.[citation needed]

Construction materials edit

Methyl cellulose finds a major application as a performance additive in construction materials. It is added to mortar dry mixes to improve the mortar's properties such as workability, open and adjustment time, water retention, viscosity, adhesion to surfaces etc. Construction grade methyl cellulose is not to be identified with food and pharmaceutical grade methyl cellulose and hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose, as it may be cross-linked with glyoxal for easy dispersion in water.[citation needed]

The construction materials can be cement-based or gypsum-based. Notable examples of dry mixture mortars which utilize methyl cellulose include tile adhesives, EIFS, insulating plasters, hand-trowelled and machine-sprayed plaster, stucco, self-leveling flooring, extruded cement panels, skim coats, joint & crack fillers, and tile grouts. Typical usage is about 0.2% – 0.5% of total dry powder weight for dry mixtures.[citation needed]

Derivatives of methyl cellulose which improve performance characteristics include hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose (HPMC) and hydroxyethyl methyl cellulose (HEMC). These derivatives typically improve the characteristics such as water retention, vertical surface slip resistance, open time, etc.[citation needed]

Glue and binder edit

Methyl cellulose can be employed as a mild glue which can be washed away with water. This may be used in the fixing of delicate pieces of art as well as in book conservation to loosen and clean off old glue from spines and bookboards.[citation needed]

Methyl cellulose is the main ingredient in many wallpaper pastes. It is also used as a binder in pastel crayons and also as a binder in medications. Hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC) is an FDA-approved water-soluble adhesive, has been used in various wet-adhesion applications in construction products, paints, and drug delivery for 70 years. HPMC adheres strongly to all wet surfaces, regardless of hydrophobicity.[12]

Paint edit

Methyl cellulose is used as a rheological modifier in paint to prevent 'sagging'.[citation needed]

Paper and textile sizing edit

Methyl cellulose is used as sizing in the production of papers and textiles as it protects the fibers from absorbing water or oil. When applied to several pieces of paper, methyl cellulose will bind the layers together, often to create a more durable or multicolored sheet. In addition, origami artists use it to coat their origami models, as the compound will stiffen and protect the paper against time.[citation needed]

Dust control edit

Hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose (HPMC) and hydroxyethyl methyl cellulose (HEMC) are used as binders in dust control technologies. They mitigate fugitive dust released in arid and semi-arid areas as well as improve commercial face masks when used in the filtering material.[13]

Cell culture edit

Methyl cellulose is also used in cell culture to study viral replication. It is dissolved in the same nutrient-containing medium in which cells are normally grown. A single layer of cells is grown on a flat surface, then infected with a virus for a short time. The strength of the viral sample used will determine how many cells get infected during this time. The thick methyl cellulose medium is then added on top of the cells in place of normal liquid medium. As the viruses replicate in the infected cells, they are able to spread between cells whose membranes touch each other, but are trapped when they enter the methyl cellulose. Only cells closely neighboring an infected cell will become infected and die. This leaves small regions of dead cells called plaques in a larger background of living uninfected cells. The number of plaques formed is determined by the strength of the original sample.[citation needed]

Bacterial and protozoal motility inhibitor edit

Aqueous methyl cellulose solutions have been used to slow bacterial and protozoal cell motility for closer inspection. Changing the amount of methyl cellulose in solution permits the adjustment of the solution's viscosity.[citation needed]

Stem cell differentiation edit

Methyl cellulose is used in the most common approaches to quantify multiple or single lineage-committed hematopoietic progenitors, called colony-forming cells (CFCs) or colony-forming units (CFUs), in combination with culture supplements that promote their proliferation and differentiation, and allow the clonal progeny of a single progenitor cell to stay together and thus form a colony of more mature cells.[citation needed]

Chemistry edit

It is a hydrophilic white powder in pure form and dissolves in cold (but not in hot) water, forming a clear viscous solution or gel.[citation needed]

Methyl cellulose is used as a buffer additive in capillary electrophoresis to control electroosmotic flow for improved separations.[citation needed]

Special effects edit

The slimy, gooey appearance of an appropriate preparation of methyl cellulose with water, in addition to its nontoxic, nonallergenic, and edible properties, makes it popular for use in special effects for motion pictures and television wherever vile slimes must be simulated. In the film Ghostbusters, the gooey substance the supernatural entities used to "slime" the Ghostbusters was mostly a thick water solution of methyl cellulose.[14] The Aliens ooze and drip a great deal of methyl cellulose—especially the queen.[15]

Methyl cellulose has been used to safely simulate molten materials, as well. In several of the Terminator films, it was back-lit with colored gels and films to reproduce the heated glow of iron in the large pouring ladles used to transport the metal from the smelting ovens to the various molds and forms.[citation needed] Methyl cellulose was also a stand-in for the lava flows in Los Angeles in Volcano and on the volcanic surface of Mustafar, in Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith.[citation needed]

Chemistry edit

Methyl cellulose does not occur naturally and is synthetically produced by heating cellulose with caustic solution (e.g. a solution of sodium hydroxide) and treating it with methyl chloride. In the substitution reaction that follows, the hydroxyl residues (-OH functional groups) are replaced by methoxide (-OCH3 groups).[citation needed]

Different kinds of methyl cellulose can be prepared depending on the number of hydroxyl groups substituted. Cellulose is a polymer consisting of numerous linked glucose molecules, each of which exposes three hydroxyl groups. The Degree of Substitution (DS) of a given form of methyl cellulose is defined as the average number of substituted hydroxyl groups per glucose. The theoretical maximum is thus a DS of 3.0, however more typical values are 1.3–2.6.[citation needed]

Different methyl cellulose preparations can also differ in the average length of their polymer backbones.[citation needed]

Solubility and temperature edit

Methyl cellulose has a lower critical solution temperature (LCST) between 40 °C and 50 °C.[citation needed] At temperatures below the LCST, it is readily soluble in water; above the LCST, it is not soluble, which has a paradoxical effect that heating a saturated solution of methyl cellulose will turn it solid, because methyl cellulose will precipitate out. The temperature at which this occurs depends on DS-value, with higher DS-values giving lower solubility and lower precipitation temperatures because the polar hydroxyl groups are masked.[citation needed]

Preparing a solution of methyl cellulose with cold water is difficult however: as the powder comes into contact with water, a gel layer forms around it, dramatically slowing the diffusion of water into the powder; hence, the inside remains dry. A better way is to first mix the powder with hot water, so that the methyl cellulose particles are well dispersed (and so have a much higher effective surface area) in the water, and cool down this dispersion while stirring, leading to the much more rapid dissolution of those particles.[16]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Methylcellulose - Drug Usage Statistics". ClinCalc. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e "DailyMed - methylcellulose powder, for solution". dailymed.nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b c British national formulary : BNF 76 (76 ed.). Pharmaceutical Press. 2018. p. 54. ISBN 9780857113382.
  4. ^ Sandford-Smith, John (1995). Eye Diseases In Hot Climates. ELBS British Government.
  5. ^ Campo-Quintero, Valentina; Rojas-Gaitán, Juan José; Ramírez-Navas, Juan Sebastián (2022-05-08). "Efecto de la adición de carragenina, goma guar y metilcelulosa en los parámetros de calidad de un helado con licor". Ciencia & Tecnología Agropecuaria. 23 (2). doi:10.21930/rcta.vol23_num2_art:2209. ISSN 2500-5308. S2CID 248686988.
  6. ^ "Hydroxypropyl Methylcellulose". www.kimachemical.com. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  7. ^ Younes, Maged; Aggett, Peter; Aguilar, Fernando; Crebelli, Riccardo; Domenico, Alessandro Di; Dusemund, Birgit; Filipič, Metka; Frutos, Maria Jose; Galtier, Pierre; Gott, David; Gundert-Remy, Ursula; Kuhnle, Gunter Georg; Lambré, Claude; Leblanc, Jean-Charles; Lillegaard, Inger Therese; Moldeus, Peter; Mortensen, Alicja; Oskarsson, Agneta; Stankovic, Ivan; Tobback, Paul; Waalkens-Berendsen, Ine; Wright, Matthew; Tard, Alexandra; Tasiopoulou, Stavroula; Woutersen, Rudolf Antonius (2018). "Re-evaluation of celluloses E 460(i), E 460(ii), E 461, E 462, E 463, E 464, E 465, E 466, E 468 and E 469 as food additives". EFSA Journal. 16 (1): e05047. doi:10.2903/j.efsa.2018.5047. PMC 7009359. PMID 32625652. S2CID 80411182.
  8. ^ Blumenthal, Heston (19 November 2004). "The Appliance of Science (Melting Point)". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  9. ^ Erica, Chayes Wida (4 February 2020). "Do Impossible and Beyond Meat burgers really contain laxatives?". TODAY.com. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  10. ^ "Ashland | benecel™ mx 100 methylcellulose". www.ashland.com. Retrieved 2023-06-27.
  11. ^ "Do Impossible and Beyond Meat burgers really contain laxatives?". TODAY.com. 2020-02-04. Retrieved 2023-06-27.
  12. ^ Lim, Chanoong; Song, Young Hoon; Song, Yoojung; Seo, Jeong Hyun; Hwang, Dong Soo; Lee, Dong Woog (2021). "Adaptive amphiphilic interaction mechanism of hydroxypropyl methylcellulose in water". Applied Surface Science. 565: 150535. Bibcode:2021ApSS..56550535L. doi:10.1016/j.apsusc.2021.150535.
  13. ^ Lee, Taehee; Kim, Sangsik; Kim, Samuel; Kwon, Na-Yeon; Rho, Sangchul; Hwang, Dong Soo; Kim, Minkyu (2020). "Environmentally Friendly Methylcellulose-Based Binders for Active and Passive Dust Control". ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. 12 (45): 50860–50869. doi:10.1021/acsami.0c15249. PMID 33119259. S2CID 226206558.
  14. ^ Aykroyd, Dan; Ramis, Harold; Reitman, Ivan (1985). Making Ghostbusters: The Screenplay. New York Zoetrope. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-918432-68-1. In reality , the gooey substance was derived from methylcellulose ether — a powdered thickening agent used in pharmaceuticals and food products0
  15. ^ DeMichael, Tom (2014-09-01). Modern Sci-Fi Films FAQ: All That's Left to Know About Time-Travel, Alien, Robot, and Out-of-This-World Movies Since 1970. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 248. ISBN 978-1-4950-0957-0. If you've seen someone get slimed in Ghostbusters, or the drooling creature in one of the Alien films, you've seen methylcellulose in action.
  16. ^ Nasatto, Pauline; Pignon, Frédéric; Silveira, Joana; Duarte, Maria; Noseda, Miguel; Rinaudo, Marguerite (24 April 2015). "Methylcellulose, a Cellulose Derivative with Original Physical Properties and Extended Applications". Polymers. 7 (5): 777–803. doi:10.3390/POLYM7050777.

Further reading edit

  • Cathleen Baker (1984). Methylcellulose & Sodium Carboxymethylcellulose: An Evaluation for Use in Paper Conservation through Accelerated Aging. Preprints of the Contributions to the Paris Congress, 2–8 September 1984: Adhesives and Consolidants, pp. 55–59. International Institute of Conservation.
  • Robert L. Feller and Myron H. Wilt (1990). Evaluation of Cellulose Ethers for Conservation (free fulltext). Getty Conservation Institute.
  • Pijper A (March 1947). "Methylcellulose and Bacterial Motility". J. Bacteriol. 53 (3): 257–69. doi:10.1128/JB.53.3.257-269.1947. PMC 518306. PMID 16561270.

methyl, cellulose, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Methyl cellulose news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Methyl cellulose or methylcellulose is a compound derived from cellulose It is sold under a variety of trade names and is used as a thickener and emulsifier in various food and cosmetic products and also as a bulk forming laxative Like cellulose it is not digestible non toxic and not an allergen In addition to culinary uses it is used in arts and crafts such as papier mache and is often the main ingredient of wallpaper paste Methyl cellulose NamesOther names Cellulose methyl ether methylated cellulose methylcellulose E461IdentifiersCAS Number 9004 67 5 YChemSpider noneECHA InfoCard 100 115 188E number E461 thickeners UNII 4GFU244C4J YCompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID1036919PropertiesChemical formula variableMolar mass variablePharmacologyATC code A06AC06 WHO Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references In 2020 it was the 422nd most commonly prescribed medication in the United States with more than 100 000 prescriptions 1 Contents 1 Uses 1 1 Medical 1 1 1 Constipation 1 1 2 Artificial tears and saliva 1 1 3 Medication manufacturing 1 2 Consumer products 1 2 1 Thickener and emulsifier 1 2 2 Food 1 2 3 Lubricant 1 3 Construction materials 1 3 1 Glue and binder 1 3 2 Paint 1 3 3 Paper and textile sizing 1 4 Dust control 1 5 Cell culture 1 5 1 Bacterial and protozoal motility inhibitor 1 5 2 Stem cell differentiation 1 6 Chemistry 1 7 Special effects 2 Chemistry 3 Solubility and temperature 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingUses editMethyl cellulose has a wide range of uses Medical edit Constipation edit Methyl cellulose is used to treat constipation and is classified as a bulk forming laxative 2 It works by increasing the amount of stool present which improves intestinal contractions 2 3 Effects generally occur within three days 2 It is taken orally with sufficient water 3 Side effects may include abdominal pain 3 It is available over the counter 2 It is sold under the brand name Citrucel among others 2 Artificial tears and saliva edit The lubricating property of methylcellulose is of particular benefit in the treatment of dry eyes 4 Solutions containing methyl cellulose or similar cellulose derivatives are used as substitute for tears or saliva if the natural production of these fluids is disturbed citation needed Medication manufacturing edit Methyl cellulose is used in the manufacture of drug capsules its edible and nontoxic properties provide a vegetarian alternative to the use of gelatin citation needed Consumer products edit Thickener and emulsifier edit Methyl cellulose is occasionally added to hair shampoos tooth pastes and liquid soaps to generate their characteristic thick consistency This is also done for foods for example ice cream 5 or croquette Methyl cellulose is also an important emulsifier preventing the separation of two mixed liquids because it is an emulsion stabilizer citation needed Food edit The E number of methyl cellulose as food additive is E461 E464 is hydroxypropyl methylcellulose 6 and more soluble in water 7 Methyl cellulose as a gel has the unique property of setting when hot and melting when cold 8 In some meat analogues that are intended to replicate the texture of meat methyl cellulose is used as an ingredient typically in concentrations less than 2 9 10 11 Lubricant edit Methyl cellulose may be used in personal lubricant citation needed Construction materials edit Methyl cellulose finds a major application as a performance additive in construction materials It is added to mortar dry mixes to improve the mortar s properties such as workability open and adjustment time water retention viscosity adhesion to surfaces etc Construction grade methyl cellulose is not to be identified with food and pharmaceutical grade methyl cellulose and hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose as it may be cross linked with glyoxal for easy dispersion in water citation needed The construction materials can be cement based or gypsum based Notable examples of dry mixture mortars which utilize methyl cellulose include tile adhesives EIFS insulating plasters hand trowelled and machine sprayed plaster stucco self leveling flooring extruded cement panels skim coats joint amp crack fillers and tile grouts Typical usage is about 0 2 0 5 of total dry powder weight for dry mixtures citation needed Derivatives of methyl cellulose which improve performance characteristics include hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose HPMC and hydroxyethyl methyl cellulose HEMC These derivatives typically improve the characteristics such as water retention vertical surface slip resistance open time etc citation needed Glue and binder edit Methyl cellulose can be employed as a mild glue which can be washed away with water This may be used in the fixing of delicate pieces of art as well as in book conservation to loosen and clean off old glue from spines and bookboards citation needed Methyl cellulose is the main ingredient in many wallpaper pastes It is also used as a binder in pastel crayons and also as a binder in medications Hydroxypropyl methylcellulose HPMC is an FDA approved water soluble adhesive has been used in various wet adhesion applications in construction products paints and drug delivery for 70 years HPMC adheres strongly to all wet surfaces regardless of hydrophobicity 12 Paint edit Methyl cellulose is used as a rheological modifier in paint to prevent sagging citation needed Paper and textile sizing edit Methyl cellulose is used as sizing in the production of papers and textiles as it protects the fibers from absorbing water or oil When applied to several pieces of paper methyl cellulose will bind the layers together often to create a more durable or multicolored sheet In addition origami artists use it to coat their origami models as the compound will stiffen and protect the paper against time citation needed Dust control edit Hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose HPMC and hydroxyethyl methyl cellulose HEMC are used as binders in dust control technologies They mitigate fugitive dust released in arid and semi arid areas as well as improve commercial face masks when used in the filtering material 13 Cell culture edit Methyl cellulose is also used in cell culture to study viral replication It is dissolved in the same nutrient containing medium in which cells are normally grown A single layer of cells is grown on a flat surface then infected with a virus for a short time The strength of the viral sample used will determine how many cells get infected during this time The thick methyl cellulose medium is then added on top of the cells in place of normal liquid medium As the viruses replicate in the infected cells they are able to spread between cells whose membranes touch each other but are trapped when they enter the methyl cellulose Only cells closely neighboring an infected cell will become infected and die This leaves small regions of dead cells called plaques in a larger background of living uninfected cells The number of plaques formed is determined by the strength of the original sample citation needed Bacterial and protozoal motility inhibitor edit Aqueous methyl cellulose solutions have been used to slow bacterial and protozoal cell motility for closer inspection Changing the amount of methyl cellulose in solution permits the adjustment of the solution s viscosity citation needed Stem cell differentiation edit Methyl cellulose is used in the most common approaches to quantify multiple or single lineage committed hematopoietic progenitors called colony forming cells CFCs or colony forming units CFUs in combination with culture supplements that promote their proliferation and differentiation and allow the clonal progeny of a single progenitor cell to stay together and thus form a colony of more mature cells citation needed Chemistry edit It is a hydrophilic white powder in pure form and dissolves in cold but not in hot water forming a clear viscous solution or gel citation needed Methyl cellulose is used as a buffer additive in capillary electrophoresis to control electroosmotic flow for improved separations citation needed Special effects edit The slimy gooey appearance of an appropriate preparation of methyl cellulose with water in addition to its nontoxic nonallergenic and edible properties makes it popular for use in special effects for motion pictures and television wherever vile slimes must be simulated In the film Ghostbusters the gooey substance the supernatural entities used to slime the Ghostbusters was mostly a thick water solution of methyl cellulose 14 The Aliens ooze and drip a great deal of methyl cellulose especially the queen 15 Methyl cellulose has been used to safely simulate molten materials as well In several of the Terminator films it was back lit with colored gels and films to reproduce the heated glow of iron in the large pouring ladles used to transport the metal from the smelting ovens to the various molds and forms citation needed Methyl cellulose was also a stand in for the lava flows in Los Angeles in Volcano and on the volcanic surface of Mustafar in Star Wars Episode III Revenge of the Sith citation needed Chemistry editMethyl cellulose does not occur naturally and is synthetically produced by heating cellulose with caustic solution e g a solution of sodium hydroxide and treating it with methyl chloride In the substitution reaction that follows the hydroxyl residues OH functional groups are replaced by methoxide OCH3 groups citation needed Different kinds of methyl cellulose can be prepared depending on the number of hydroxyl groups substituted Cellulose is a polymer consisting of numerous linked glucose molecules each of which exposes three hydroxyl groups The Degree of Substitution DS of a given form of methyl cellulose is defined as the average number of substituted hydroxyl groups per glucose The theoretical maximum is thus a DS of 3 0 however more typical values are 1 3 2 6 citation needed Different methyl cellulose preparations can also differ in the average length of their polymer backbones citation needed Solubility and temperature editMethyl cellulose has a lower critical solution temperature LCST between 40 C and 50 C citation needed At temperatures below the LCST it is readily soluble in water above the LCST it is not soluble which has a paradoxical effect that heating a saturated solution of methyl cellulose will turn it solid because methyl cellulose will precipitate out The temperature at which this occurs depends on DS value with higher DS values giving lower solubility and lower precipitation temperatures because the polar hydroxyl groups are masked citation needed Preparing a solution of methyl cellulose with cold water is difficult however as the powder comes into contact with water a gel layer forms around it dramatically slowing the diffusion of water into the powder hence the inside remains dry A better way is to first mix the powder with hot water so that the methyl cellulose particles are well dispersed and so have a much higher effective surface area in the water and cool down this dispersion while stirring leading to the much more rapid dissolution of those particles 16 See also editCarboxymethyl cellulose Ethyl cellulose Ethyl methyl cellulose Hydroxypropyl cellulose Hydroxyethyl celluloseReferences edit Methylcellulose Drug Usage Statistics ClinCalc Retrieved 7 October 2022 a b c d e DailyMed methylcellulose powder for solution dailymed nlm nih gov Retrieved 19 April 2019 a b c British national formulary BNF 76 76 ed Pharmaceutical Press 2018 p 54 ISBN 9780857113382 Sandford Smith John 1995 Eye Diseases In Hot Climates ELBS British Government Campo Quintero Valentina Rojas Gaitan Juan Jose Ramirez Navas Juan Sebastian 2022 05 08 Efecto de la adicion de carragenina goma guar y metilcelulosa en los parametros de calidad de un helado con licor Ciencia amp Tecnologia Agropecuaria 23 2 doi 10 21930 rcta vol23 num2 art 2209 ISSN 2500 5308 S2CID 248686988 Hydroxypropyl Methylcellulose www kimachemical com Retrieved 28 February 2023 Younes Maged Aggett Peter Aguilar Fernando Crebelli Riccardo Domenico Alessandro Di Dusemund Birgit Filipic Metka Frutos Maria Jose Galtier Pierre Gott David Gundert Remy Ursula Kuhnle Gunter Georg Lambre Claude Leblanc Jean Charles Lillegaard Inger Therese Moldeus Peter Mortensen Alicja Oskarsson Agneta Stankovic Ivan Tobback Paul Waalkens Berendsen Ine Wright Matthew Tard Alexandra Tasiopoulou Stavroula Woutersen Rudolf Antonius 2018 Re evaluation of celluloses E 460 i E 460 ii E 461 E 462 E 463 E 464 E 465 E 466 E 468 and E 469 as food additives EFSA Journal 16 1 e05047 doi 10 2903 j efsa 2018 5047 PMC 7009359 PMID 32625652 S2CID 80411182 Blumenthal Heston 19 November 2004 The Appliance of Science Melting Point The Guardian Retrieved 8 August 2012 Erica Chayes Wida 4 February 2020 Do Impossible and Beyond Meat burgers really contain laxatives TODAY com Retrieved 2 September 2020 Ashland benecel mx 100 methylcellulose www ashland com Retrieved 2023 06 27 Do Impossible and Beyond Meat burgers really contain laxatives TODAY com 2020 02 04 Retrieved 2023 06 27 Lim Chanoong Song Young Hoon Song Yoojung Seo Jeong Hyun Hwang Dong Soo Lee Dong Woog 2021 Adaptive amphiphilic interaction mechanism of hydroxypropyl methylcellulose in water Applied Surface Science 565 150535 Bibcode 2021ApSS 56550535L doi 10 1016 j apsusc 2021 150535 Lee Taehee Kim Sangsik Kim Samuel Kwon Na Yeon Rho Sangchul Hwang Dong Soo Kim Minkyu 2020 Environmentally Friendly Methylcellulose Based Binders for Active and Passive Dust Control ACS Applied Materials amp Interfaces 12 45 50860 50869 doi 10 1021 acsami 0c15249 PMID 33119259 S2CID 226206558 Aykroyd Dan Ramis Harold Reitman Ivan 1985 Making Ghostbusters The Screenplay New York Zoetrope p 81 ISBN 978 0 918432 68 1 In reality the gooey substance was derived from methylcellulose ether a powdered thickening agent used in pharmaceuticals and food products0 DeMichael Tom 2014 09 01 Modern Sci Fi Films FAQ All That s Left to Know About Time Travel Alien Robot and Out of This World Movies Since 1970 Hal Leonard Corporation p 248 ISBN 978 1 4950 0957 0 If you ve seen someone get slimed in Ghostbusters or the drooling creature in one of the Alien films you ve seen methylcellulose in action Nasatto Pauline Pignon Frederic Silveira Joana Duarte Maria Noseda Miguel Rinaudo Marguerite 24 April 2015 Methylcellulose a Cellulose Derivative with Original Physical Properties and Extended Applications Polymers 7 5 777 803 doi 10 3390 POLYM7050777 Further reading editCathleen Baker 1984 Methylcellulose amp Sodium Carboxymethylcellulose An Evaluation for Use in Paper Conservation through Accelerated Aging Preprints of the Contributions to the Paris Congress 2 8 September 1984 Adhesives and Consolidants pp 55 59 International Institute of Conservation Robert L Feller and Myron H Wilt 1990 Evaluation of Cellulose Ethers for Conservation free fulltext Getty Conservation Institute Pijper A March 1947 Methylcellulose and Bacterial Motility J Bacteriol 53 3 257 69 doi 10 1128 JB 53 3 257 269 1947 PMC 518306 PMID 16561270 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Methyl cellulose amp oldid 1195896568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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