Titanium dioxide is an insoluble mineral, meaning it cannot dissolve in water. Known for its bright, white pigment, manufacturers use titanium dioxide in many different capacities, including in cosmetics, foods, and drugs.
Wegman’s puts titanium dioxide in its Original Macaroni and Cheese. Campbell’s Healthy Request Chunky Chicken Corn Chowder has it, as does Food Club’s Chunky New England Clam Chowder. Marzetti uses the color agent to brighten its Cream Cheese Fruit Dip. Dairy products usually don’t need titanium dioxide to look white, but Kroger has decided to add titanium dioxide to its Fat Free Half-and-Half. And titanium dioxide isn’t only in especially white or brightly colored foods: Little Debbie adds it to Fudge Rounds and many other products. According to the Food Scores database maintained by Environmental Working Group, more than 1,800 brand-name food products have titanium dioxide on their ingredients list. That said, it can still lurk as an unspecified “artificial color,” or labels might simply say “color added.”
tion of the precipitate, the mass is filter pressed, dried, muflled and processed in the on the market, in that the {covering capacity of the pigment is greatly increased, as well The titanium oxide is peptized or held in as its fastness to light, and ease of working in oils. It is also superior to the so called double strength lithopone made by doubling the zinc sulphide conent, in that it is very neutral to acid vehicles. It is also far superior to other titanium compounds on the market, inasmuch as greater opacities are obtained with a relatively small amount of titanium oxide, than has heretofore been obtained with far greater proportions of titanium oxide, thereby effecting a considerable economy over that of other similar products containing'titanium oxide.
Titanium dioxide is used a food colour (E171) and, as with all food colours, its technological function is to make food more visually appealing, to give colour to food that would otherwise be colourless, or to restore the original appearance of food. Titanium dioxide is also present in cosmetics, paints, and medicines.