Microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) is one of the most widely used functional ingredients in global food manufacturing, pharmaceutical formulation, and nutraceutical production. As a professional MCC supplier with decades of manufacturing experience, we provide a full range of MCC powder, colloidal MCC, and food-grade microcrystalline cellulose products to customers worldwide — backed by consistent quality, complete regulatory documentation, and dedicated technical support.
Whether you are sourcing MCC for tablet direct compression, ice cream stabilization, dairy beverage suspension, or oral pharmaceutical suspensions, we have the grade and the expertise to support your formulation.

Microcrystalline cellulose is a purified, partially depolymerized cellulose produced by controlled acid hydrolysis of alpha-cellulose obtained from fibrous plant sources, primarily wood pulp and cotton linters. The hydrolysis process selectively removes the amorphous regions of the cellulose chain, leaving behind a highly crystalline, mechanically stable microstructure in the form of a fine white powder.
The resulting material — MCC powder — is chemically inert, tasteless, odorless, and non-digestible. It does not contribute calories or allergens to finished products, and it is stable across a wide range of temperatures and pH values.
MCC is classified as Generally Recognized as Safe (GRAS) by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and is approved as a food additive under E460(i) in the European Union. It is also monographed in the United States Pharmacopeia (USP), European Pharmacopoeia (EP), Japanese Pharmacopoeia (JP), and the Food Chemicals Codex (FCC), making it one of the most thoroughly documented and globally accepted functional excipients available.
In food systems, MCC functions as a stabilizer, thickener, fat replacer, anti-caking agent, and suspension aid. In pharmaceutical applications, it serves as a binder, filler, disintegrant, and suspension stabilizer. Its versatility, safety profile, and broad regulatory acceptance make it indispensable across multiple industries.
Microcrystalline cellulose is available in multiple forms including MCC powder, colloidal MCC, food grade MCC, and pharmaceutical grade MCC, each engineered to deliver specific functional performance in different processing environments.

Standard MCC powder is the most widely used form of microcrystalline cellulose. Available in multiple particle size grades, it is primarily used as a binder, filler, and disintegrant in oral solid pharmaceutical dosage forms and as a functional additive in food products. It offers excellent dry binding capacity, compressibility, and chemical purity.
Our standard MCC grades include: AH101, AH102, AH103, AH105, AH112, AH113, AH200 — available in both food grade and pharmaceutical grade with full USP/FCC compliance.
Colloidal MCC — also referred to as colloidal microcrystalline cellulose, microcrystalline cellulose gel, MCC hydrogel, cellulose gel stabilizer, or colloidal cellulose suspension — is a co-processed product combining MCC with a small amount of sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (NaCMC). When hydrated under sufficient shear, colloidal MCC forms a thixotropic three-dimensional gel network that provides superior suspension stability, body, and creaminess in liquid food and pharmaceutical systems.
Our colloidal MCC grades include: AH2608, AH2609, AH2300, AH2400 — designed specifically for food applications including dairy beverages, ice cream, salad dressings, and oral pharmaceutical suspensions.
The correct grade selection depends on your application type, processing conditions, and target functional performance. Our technical team is available to assist with grade selection, dosage optimization, and dispersion protocol for your specific formulation.
Microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) is available in different forms including MCC powder, microcrystalline cellulose excipient and food grade MCC for various applications.


Dairy Beverages and Milk Drinks In chocolate milk, flavored milk, plant-based milk alternatives, and drinking yogurt, colloidal MCC prevents the sedimentation of cocoa particles, insoluble proteins, and other suspended solids. It improves mouthfeel and provides a consistent, uniform texture throughout the product’s shelf life without affecting flavor.
Yogurt and Fermented Dairy Products In stirred yogurt, MCC improves gel strength and significantly reduces syneresis (whey separation) without negatively impacting fermentation. It is compatible with standard dairy cultures and does not interfere with acidification.
Salad Dressings and Emulsified Sauces In oil-in-water emulsion systems, colloidal MCC acts simultaneously as an emulsion stabilizer and a viscosity builder. It maintains stability under temperature fluctuation, mechanical stress, and extended storage.
Low-Fat and Reduced-Calorie Products MCC provides body, bulk, and fat-like texture in reduced-fat spreads, dressings, dairy products, and dietary foods. Its cell structure mimics fat at the microscopic level, making it one of the most effective and clean-label fat replacers available.

Instant Beverages and Powdered Drinks In dry-blend powder applications, MCC powder acts as an anti-caking agent, improves flowability, and ensures consistent reconstitution performance when the product is dissolved in water.

Baked Goods and Snacks MCC improves moisture retention, extends shelf life, and contributes to structure and volume in baked goods, particularly in fiber-enriched or low-fat bakery formulations.

Direct Compression Tablet Manufacturing microcrystalline cellulose excipient is the most widely used excipient for direct compression tableting worldwide. Its exceptional dry binding capacity allows formulators to skip wet granulation entirely, saving time, energy, and processing cost. MCC produces mechanically strong tablets with consistent hardness, low friability, and predictable disintegration profiles.
Oral Liquid Suspensions Colloidal MCC, combined with NaCMC, forms a thixotropic gel structure in oral liquid formulations that keeps suspended active ingredients uniformly distributed throughout the product’s shelf life. The suspension re-disperses easily on shaking. This system is widely used in pediatric and geriatric formulations where swallowing solid dosage forms is difficult.
Controlled and Sustained Release Formulations When combined with HPMC or ethyl cellulose, MCC helps modulate the rate of drug diffusion and erosion in sustained-release matrix tablets, allowing extended therapeutic coverage from a single dose.
Capsule Fill pharmaceutical MCC provides excellent flowability and bulk density control for hard gelatin and HPMC capsule filling operations. It is compatible with a wide range of APIs and nutraceutical actives.
Topical Preparations MCC is used as a rheology modifier and stabilizer in semi-solid topical formulations including creams, gels, and ointments.
In cosmetic formulations, MCC serves as a gentle abrasive for exfoliation, an emulsion stabilizer, a viscosity modifier, and an absorbent in face creams, body lotions, cleansers, and color cosmetics.
All products are manufactured under GMP conditions and comply with USP/NF, FCC, and EU food additive regulations (E460i). Full COA, MSDS, and regulatory documentation are available upon request.
The following table covers our colloidal microcrystalline cellulose grades (AH2608, AH2609, AH2300, AH2400), co-processed with NaCMC for food and beverage applications requiring suspension stability and gel texture.
| TEST ITEMS | AH2608 | AH2609 | AH2300 | AH2400 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PH | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 |
| Chloride | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 |
| Water Soluble Substances, % | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 |
| Granulometry, % | 60 mesh<1.0; 200 mesh<30.0 | 60 mesh>10; 100 mesh>50.0 | 60 mesh<1.0; 200 mesh<30.0 | 60 mesh<8.0; 200 mesh>45.0 |
| Conductivity, µS/cm | <75 | <75 | <75 | <75 |
| Loss on Drying, w/% | ≤7.0 | ≤7.0 | ≤7.0 | ≤7.0 |
| Residue on Ignition, % | ≤0.05 | ≤0.05 | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 |
| Heavy Metal, % | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 |
| Arsenic, % | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 |
| Total Aerobic Microbial Count, cfu/g | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 |
| Total Moulds and Yeasts Count, cfu/g | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 |
| Escherichia coli | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected |
The following table covers MCC grades AH122, AH102, AH103, AH105, and AH112, suitable for pharmaceutical direct compression, food-grade applications, and specialized granulometry requirements.
| TEST ITEMS | AH122 | AH102 | AH103 | AH105 | AH112 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PH | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 |
| Chloride | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 |
| Water Soluble Substances, % | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 |
| Granulometry, % | 60 mesh<1.0; 200 mesh<30.0 | 60 mesh<8.0; 200 mesh>45.0 | 60 mesh<1.0; 200 mesh<30.0 | 60 mesh<0.1; 400 mesh<1.0 | 60 mesh<8.0; 200 mesh<45.0 |
| Conductivity, µS/cm | <75 | <75 | <75 | <75 | <75 |
| Loss on Drying, w/% | ≤7.0 | ≤7.0 | ≤3.0 | ≤7.0 | ≤0.8 |
| Residue on Ignition, % | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 |
| Heavy Metal, % | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 |
| Arsenic, % | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 |
| Total Aerobic Microbial Count, cfu/g | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 |
| Total Moulds and Yeasts Count, cfu/g | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 |
| Escherichia coli | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected |
The following table covers MCC grades AH113, AH200, AH301, AH302, and AH1000, covering a broad range of particle sizes and moisture specifications for diverse pharmaceutical and food applications.
| TEST ITEMS | AH113 | AH200 | AH301 | AH302 | AH1000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PH | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 | 5.0–7.5 |
| Chloride | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 | <0.03 |
| Water Soluble Substances, % | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 | <0.2 |
| Granulometry, % | 60 mesh<1.0; 200 mesh<30.0 | 60 mesh>10; 100 mesh>50.0 | 60 mesh<1.0; 200 mesh<30.0 | 60 mesh<8.0; 200 mesh>45.0 | 60 mesh<8.0; 200 mesh<45.0 |
| Conductivity, µS/cm | <75 | <75 | <75 | <75 | <75 |
| Loss on Drying, w/% | ≤1.5 | ≤7.0 | ≤7.0 | ≤7.0 | ≤0.8 |
| Residue on Ignition, % | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 | ≤0.1 |
| Heavy Metal, % | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 | ≤0.0010 |
| Arsenic, % | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 | <0.0002 |
| Total Aerobic Microbial Count, cfu/g | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 | ≤1000 |
| Total Moulds and Yeasts Count, cfu/g | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 | ≤100 |
| Escherichia coli | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected | Not detected |
Getting the dosage right is critical to achieving the desired texture, stability, and functional performance from MCC and colloidal MCC. The following guidelines are based on industry practice and formulation experience across food and pharmaceutical applications.
The general principle for colloidal MCC is that it must be fully dispersed and hydrated under adequate shear before mixing with other ingredients. Insufficient shear during dispersion is the single most common cause of performance failure in the field.
For ice cream and frozen desserts, the recommended dosage is 0.1%–0.5% of the total formulation weight. At the lower end (0.1–0.2%), colloidal MCC reduces ice crystal growth and improves melt resistance. At higher levels (0.3–0.5%), it delivers a noticeable improvement in body and creaminess, which is especially important in low-fat ice cream where fat reduction must be compensated with texture.
For dairy beverages and flavored milk drinks, the typical effective range is 0.2%–0.5%. Lighter-bodied beverages such as chocolate milk generally perform well at 0.2–0.3%, while thicker, yogurt-style drinking products may require up to 0.5% to achieve the target viscosity and suspension stability.
For salad dressings and emulsified sauces, the recommended range is 0.3%–1.0%. In emulsion systems, colloidal MCC provides both structural support for the dispersed oil phase and viscosity building for the continuous water phase. At 0.7–1.0%, the emulsion remains stable under temperature fluctuation and mechanical stress during extended transport and storage.
For stirred yogurt and fermented dairy, dosages of 0.2%–0.6% are typical. MCC improves gel firmness and minimizes syneresis without interfering with the starter culture or acidification process.
For reduced-fat and dietary products, effective dosages range from 0.5% to 1.5%. As fat removal increases, a higher loading rate of MCC is required to maintain the target body and mouthfeel. In heavily fat-reduced formulations (greater than 50% fat reduction), dosages approaching 1.5% may be necessary.
For instant beverages and reconstituted powder products, colloidal MCC is typically used at 1.0%–3.0% in the dry powder blend to provide anti-caking properties and consistent reconstitution performance.
As a tablet filler and binder in direct compression formulations, MCC is typically used at 10%–90% of total tablet weight, with the most common range being 20–40%. The exact level depends on the API loading, target tablet hardness, and disintegration requirements.
As a tablet disintegrant, MCC is used at 5%–15% of tablet weight. At this concentration, MCC’s wicking action promotes rapid water uptake and promotes fast tablet breakup, supporting quick drug release profiles.
In oral liquid suspensions using colloidal MCC, the typical usage range is 0.5%–2.0% of the suspension volume. When combined with NaCMC at a weight ratio of approximately 9:1 (MCC:NaCMC), the colloidal system provides robust thixotropic suspension stability that is easy to redisperse on shaking.
For hard capsule filling, MCC is used as a diluent at 10%–80% of capsule fill weight, depending on the API dosage level and required fill weight.
Dispersion Protocol for Colloidal MCC
Always add colloidal MCC to water before adding other ingredients. Use warm water at 50–60°C and apply high-shear mixing at 3,000–5,000 rpm for a minimum of 5–10 minutes. Do not add salt, sugar, starch, or acids to the water before the MCC has fully hydrated — these components can interfere with network formation and significantly reduce functional performance. In high-acid systems (pH below 4.0), increase the dosage by approximately 20–30% to compensate for the reduced gel network strength under acidic conditions.
Microcrystalline cellulose, carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), and hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC) are all cellulose-derived functional ingredients, but they differ fundamentally in their chemistry, solubility, and the way they deliver functional performance in formulations.
MCC is an insoluble, particulate cellulose that works through physical network formation. It does not dissolve in water — it disperses. In its colloidal form, MCC builds a three-dimensional thixotropic network that physically suspends particles and provides body to liquid systems. This makes it uniquely effective for suspension stabilization and fat replacement in food, and for direct compression tableting in pharmaceuticals. Because MCC is insoluble and chemically inert, it has no meaningful effect on solution viscosity at low concentrations, and it contributes no off-taste or flavor to the finished product.
HPMC is a nonionic, water-soluble cellulose ether that forms clear, viscous solutions. In pharmaceuticals, HPMC is best known for its role in sustained-release tablet matrices, where it swells upon water contact and controls drug diffusion through a gelling mechanism. HPMC is also widely used as a tablet film-coating polymer, as a thickener in ophthalmic solutions, and as a construction additive in tile adhesives and cement mortars.
The key practical distinction is this: when you need to suspend insoluble particles, provide body without dissolving, or replace fat at low concentration, MCC is the right choice. When you need to build solution viscosity or form transparent gels, CMC or HPMC are more appropriate. In many advanced formulations — particularly pharmaceutical oral suspensions and low-fat food products — all three materials are used together to achieve a performance profile that none can deliver alone.
| Property | MCC | CMC | HPMC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solubility | Insoluble (dispersible) | Water soluble | Water soluble |
| Primary Function | Binder, filler, suspension stabilizer | Thickener, binder | Thickener, film former, controlled release |
| Tablet Application | Direct compression | Wet granulation binder | Sustained release matrix |
| Suspension Performance | Excellent (colloidal grade) | Good | Moderate |
| Heat Stability | Excellent | Good | Good |
| pH Sensitivity | Low | Moderate | Low |
| Transparency in Solution | Opaque | Clear | Clear |
| Fat Replacement Ability | Yes | No | No |
| GRAS / Food Approved | Yes | Yes | Yes |
We are a GMP-certified manufacturer and microcrystalline cellulose supplier of microcrystalline cellulose, serving customers in the food, pharmaceutical, nutraceutical, and cosmetic industries across more than 30 countries.
Our manufacturing facility operates under full GMP compliance, with dedicated quality control laboratories performing in-process and final-release testing on every batch. We do not source from third-party manufacturers — our MCC is produced in our own facilities, giving us complete control over raw material sourcing, process parameters, and product quality.
We supply 14 distinct MCC grades covering a comprehensive range of particle sizes and moisture specifications, from fine pharmaceutical grades (AH105, AH103) to high-bulk-density direct compression grades (AH102, AH112, AH1000) and purpose-designed colloidal grades for food applications (AH2608, AH2609, AH2300, AH2400). Whatever your application requires, we have a grade that fits.
Every shipment is accompanied by a full Certificate of Analysis (COA), Safety Data Sheet (MSDS), allergen declaration, and country-specific regulatory certificates as required. We support export documentation for FDA, EU, and Asia-Pacific regulatory requirements.
Our technical team includes experienced food scientists and pharmaceutical formulation specialists who provide application-specific support — including dosage guidance, dispersion protocol development, compatibility assessment, and scale-up troubleshooting. We support your formulation from lab trial through commercial production.
For buyers managing supply chain risk, we offer flexible minimum order quantities, consistent lead times, and stable pricing frameworks for annual supply agreements.
What is MCC used for? MCC (microcrystalline cellulose) is used as a binder, filler, and disintegrant in pharmaceutical tablet manufacturing, and as a stabilizer, texture modifier, fat replacer, and anti-caking agent in food products. In its colloidal form, it is used to stabilize ice cream, dairy beverages, emulsified sauces, and oral pharmaceutical suspensions.
What is the difference between MCC powder and colloidal MCC? Standard MCC powder does not fully disperse in water and provides limited functionality in liquid systems. Colloidal MCC is co-processed with NaCMC and is specifically engineered to disperse fully under shear, forming a stable thixotropic gel network in water. Colloidal MCC is the appropriate choice for suspension stabilization, texture building, and fat replacement in liquid food and pharmaceutical products.
Is MCC safe for food use? Yes. MCC is classified as GRAS (Generally Recognized as Safe) by the U.S. FDA and is approved as E460(i) in the European Union. It is also listed in major pharmacopoeias worldwide including USP, EP, and JP. MCC is non-toxic, non-digestible, non-allergenic, calorie-free, and has a decades-long history of safe use in food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic products.
What is cellulose hydrogel? Cellulose hydrogel is a pre-hydrated or highly dispersible form of colloidal MCC that forms a stable three-dimensional gel network in water. It is used in food products and pharmaceutical oral liquids to provide body, improve stability, and suspend insoluble particles. It is chemically identical to MCC but formulated for immediate gel-state performance.
Typical dosages range from 0.1% to 1.5% depending on the application. Ice cream and frozen desserts: 0.1–0.5%. Dairy beverages: 0.2–0.5%. Salad dressings: 0.3–1.0%. Reduced-fat products: up to 1.5%. Always conduct formulation trials under your specific processing conditions to determine the optimal level for your product.
What grades of MCC do you supply? We supply 14 MCC grades: colloidal grades AH2608, AH2609, AH2300, AH2400; standard grades AH122, AH102, AH103, AH105, AH112, AH113, AH200, AH301, AH302, and AH1000. Grades differ in particle size distribution and loss on drying, covering pharmaceutical direct compression, food-grade stabilization, and specialty applications. Contact us for grade selection assistance.
Can MCC be used in vegan and clean-label products? Yes. MCC is derived from plant sources (wood pulp or cotton linters) and contains no animal-derived ingredients, making it fully compatible with vegan and vegetarian formulations. Its simple plant-derived origin also supports clean-label positioning, particularly when declared as “microcrystalline cellulose” or “cellulose” on the ingredient list.
Add colloidal MCC to water before other ingredients. Use warm water (50–60°C) and apply high-shear mixing at 3,000–5,000 rpm for 5–10 minutes. Do not pre-dissolve salts, sugars, or acids in the water before MCC hydration, as these will significantly impair gel network formation and reduce functional performance.
What documentation do you provide with each shipment? We provide a Certificate of Analysis (COA), Safety Data Sheet (MSDS), allergen declaration, and country-specific regulatory certificates (FDA, EU, etc.) with every commercial shipment. Halal and Kosher certification is available upon request.
The appropriate dosage of MCC varies depending on the application and product type. For colloidal MCC in food applications, typical usage levels range from 0.1% to 1.5% of total formulation weight — ice cream and frozen desserts generally require 0.1%–0.5%, dairy beverages 0.2%–0.5%, salad dressings and emulsified sauces 0.3%–1.0%, and reduced-fat or dietary products up to 1.5%. In pharmaceutical tablet manufacturing, standard MCC powder is used at 10%–90% of tablet weight as a filler and binder, and at 5%–15% as a disintegrant. For oral liquid suspensions, colloidal MCC is typically dosed at 0.5%–2.0% of suspension volume. It is important to note that optimal dosage depends on your specific formulation, processing conditions, and target functional performance — our technical team is available to assist with dosage optimization and dispersion protocol for your application.
We supply MCC powder, colloidal MCC, cellulose hydrogel, and related cellulose-based ingredients in bulk to food manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, contract manufacturers, and trading companies worldwide.
Get in touch for:
📧 wangpengfei@actabiotechnology.com📞 +8618263653583 🌐 https://www.actabiotechnology.com
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