For a long time, the global high-end food-grade silicon dioxide market has been monopolized by a few international enterprises from Germany, the United States, and other countries, with domestic enterprises only competing in the mid-to-low-end market. However, with the successful mass production of ZLSILW58BF ultra-low iron silicon dioxide by Zhongqi Silicon, this situation has been completely broken. This product not only fills the domestic technical gap but also surpasses international peers in the core indicator of iron content control, marking that China's food additive industry has officially entered the world's first echelon.
As an "industrial monosodium glutamate", food-grade silicon dioxide is widely used in food, medicine, cosmetics and other fields. With the upgrading of consumption, downstream customers have put forward higher and higher requirements for product purity and stability. Especially in the high-end food field, the control of metal ions has become a passport for products to enter the international market.
Zhongqi Silicon keenly captured this market trend and launched the ultra-low iron silicon dioxide R&D project as early as 2018. After thousands of experiments, it finally overcame the two major technical problems of raw material purification and iron-free production, and developed ZLSILW58BF with completely independent intellectual property rights. This product has obtained multiple international certifications such as FSSC22000, ISO22000, HALAL, and KOSHER, and is exported to more than 20 countries and regions in Southeast Asia, Europe, and North America.
"Technological innovation is the core competitiveness of Zhongqi Silicon," said the General Manager of Zhongqi Silicon. "In the future, we will continue to increase R&D investment, focus on the high-end silicon material field, and develop more innovative products to meet market demand. Our goal is to become the world's leading food-grade silicon dioxide solution provider in 3-5 years, bringing 'Chinese Intelligent Manufacturing' silicon materials to the world."