The substances that make up e-liquid may be used every day
Many people are wondering whether the ingredients of e-liquid are poisonous, especially nicotine. Isn't nicotine highly toxic?
In fact, the ingredients in e-liquid are very simple: propylene glycol, glycerin, edible flavor, nicotine (optional), and additives (optional). These substances are actually common in our daily lives and are often used by us. Know what you eat contains these substances.
I have also explained a lot about nicotine. Talking about nicotine aside from the dose is blind behavior. Nicotine is highly toxic at high doses. This is not wrong, but under the normal use of vapes, nicotine is not harmful to the human body. Harmful, of course, if you inhale too much vapes, you may also cause nicotine overdose, dizziness and vomiting. Take a break.
We can usually see the ingredients of e-liquid in the supermarket. Let ’s go into the supermarket and take a look. As soon as we enter the door, we can see that the gum is doing a promotion. I just picked it up and looked at the ingredients list. Column.
Waffles taste Q bombs, with a strong egg aroma, and match with black tea, perfect for afternoon tea.
Look at the ingredients list, there are propylene glycol, propylene glycol fatty acids.
Let's take a look at the rich and silky chocolate chip cake, which contains glycerin and flavor.
Pick up a box of crispy biscuits, and the ingredients list also contains glycerin and flavor.
Bread is also a common food for breakfast. Take a look at the ingredients list: glycerin, flavor.
Matcha cake: propylene glycol, edible flavor.
Cheesecake: glycerin, propylene glycol fatty acids, food flavors.
Piglet Peggy Yolk Pie: glycerin, propylene glycol fatty acid, flavor.
Yogurt pie: glycerin, propylene glycol, edible flavor.
Hand torn nut bread: glycerin, edible flavor.
Through random surveys, glycerin, propylene glycol, and edible flavors have been widely used in foods, and they are more common in desserts, cakes, biscuits and other products. These are only some products with specific ingredient labels, and many products only list the main ingredients. For "base materials" such as glycerol and propylene glycol, they are often directly covered by "food additives". Therefore, the application of these materials in food is much wider than imagined.
Glycerin and propylene glycol are not only used in food, but also widely used in the fields of medicine and cosmetics.
Beauty can look at their own cosmetics. Glycerin, propylene glycol, and flavor will definitely appear in the ingredient list.
Some people may say, I do n’t use cosmetics, I do n’t eat sweets or pastries, I ca n’t say I have anything to do with e-liquid, right?
In fact, in nature, nicotine does not only exist in tobacco. Many fruits and vegetables contain a certain amount of nicotine. Some are because of pesticide residues that contain nicotine as the main component, and some contain nicotine.
Some scholars have measured the nicotine content in foods and found that the nicotine content in potato skin can be as high as 14.80 mg / kg based on dry weight, while the content in peeled potatoes is below the detection limit (1 mg / kg).
The average content in tomato fruit was 2.31 mg / kg, eggplant was 2.65 mg / kg, and green pepper was 3.15 mg / kg.
The amount of nicotine in tomatoes does not seem to be low, but because the data is calculated on a dry weight basis, and the moisture content of tomatoes is as high as nearly 95%, the actual content must be divided by 20, which is 0.12 mg / kg.
It can be seen from the above that the ingredients of e-liquid are distributed in our daily life, and we will consume or use them, so we don't need to worry about whether the e-liquid ingredients are harmful at all. Instead, we need to be more concerned about whether the e-liquid purchased by us is produced by a regular e-liquid manufacturer, so as to truly eliminate the dangers of counterfeit e-liquid.
At present, most e-liquid manufacturers use enterprise standards or industry standards. Therefore, China must formulate national standards for electronic cigarette products, especially e-liquid, to compulsorily regulate the production of e-liquid, and to prevent substandard charging. 2. Add substances beyond the standard to protect consumers' safety to the greatest extent!