Leaving out oils and things that just flat-out won't vaporize:
I know diacetyl can cause irreversible damage to the lungs over time, acetylpropionyl is also suspect because it's a very similar short-chain diketone, and I'm assuming acetoin is on the bad list because it can be pretty easily oxidized into diacetyl. But are there other chemical families vapers tend to stay away from, whether because there are known reasons to be concerned, or because of other hangups? For example, in the "natural cosmetics" community, a lot of people tend to preach against benzyl alcohol/benzoic acid and their esters. I saw one site and a couple copycats speaking out against aldehydes and carboxylic acids, but couldn't figure why beyond that they evidently wanted to differentiate themselves from the crowd.
Is there anything like this for the vaping community? What's the general feeling towards IFRA regulations? Do they factor in at all? (They're basically a set of restrictions for the use of fragrance chemicals of concern which can cause allergic reactions or phototoxicity, but most of those chemicals are flavor chemicals as well.) As far as flavoring regulations go, are additives expected to be on the FEMA GRAS list, or one of the FDA approved food additives lists, or both (many are on both)? Would either be accepted as okay?
I'm a bit of a mad scientist, have dozens of single flavor molecules on hand due to still-ongoing scent experiments, and was just curious whether there's any strong sentiment about these things. If you're going to build from scratch may as well pick an interesting spec, yes? The components of most of the flavor blends I'm seeing don't seem to hold to any particular restrictions beyond "eatable" and "try to avoid diacetyl."
I know diacetyl can cause irreversible damage to the lungs over time, acetylpropionyl is also suspect because it's a very similar short-chain diketone, and I'm assuming acetoin is on the bad list because it can be pretty easily oxidized into diacetyl. But are there other chemical families vapers tend to stay away from, whether because there are known reasons to be concerned, or because of other hangups? For example, in the "natural cosmetics" community, a lot of people tend to preach against benzyl alcohol/benzoic acid and their esters. I saw one site and a couple copycats speaking out against aldehydes and carboxylic acids, but couldn't figure why beyond that they evidently wanted to differentiate themselves from the crowd.
Is there anything like this for the vaping community? What's the general feeling towards IFRA regulations? Do they factor in at all? (They're basically a set of restrictions for the use of fragrance chemicals of concern which can cause allergic reactions or phototoxicity, but most of those chemicals are flavor chemicals as well.) As far as flavoring regulations go, are additives expected to be on the FEMA GRAS list, or one of the FDA approved food additives lists, or both (many are on both)? Would either be accepted as okay?
I'm a bit of a mad scientist, have dozens of single flavor molecules on hand due to still-ongoing scent experiments, and was just curious whether there's any strong sentiment about these things. If you're going to build from scratch may as well pick an interesting spec, yes? The components of most of the flavor blends I'm seeing don't seem to hold to any particular restrictions beyond "eatable" and "try to avoid diacetyl."