dc.description.abstract |
After discovery of saccharin in 1877 by professor
I. Remen and professor C. Fahlberg of the United
States, a small-scale plant was set up in New York
in 1884, heralding its commercialization.
With the rush of industrialization that followed
in respective advanced nations, the market of saccharin
has greatly expanded to occupy the weightiest position
as an artificial sweetening agent.
About 500 times as sweet as cane sugar, saccharin
is in wide use as a substitute of sugar for foodstuffs,
medicines and cosmetics. Due to the limi ta tion in
sugar cane resources as raw materials of sugar, the
demand for saccharin is on a steady increase. |
en_US |