Resources & Insights
Mineral science, water & industry guides
Practical, evidence-based guides on ionic trace minerals, water remineralization, concentrated mineral drops, fortification and mineral applications across industries.
How Functional Beverages Use Electrolyte Minerals
How functional and sports beverages use natural electrolyte minerals — magnesium, potassium, sodium and chloride — for hydration.
Read articleSustainable Water Programs for Hotels
How hotels build sustainable, premium in-house water programs that cut plastic waste and create a new revenue stream.
Read moreTrace Minerals for Beverage Manufacturers
How beverage manufacturers use natural trace minerals to differentiate functional drinks, hydration products and mineral waters.
Read moreTrace Mineral Testing and Analysis
How trace minerals are tested and analysed — methods, standards and what to expect from a credible supplier.
Read moreUnderstanding the COA for Mineral Products
How to read a certificate of analysis (COA) for mineral concentrates — what each section means for buyers and formulators.
Read moreQuality Control for Mineral Concentrates
Inside quality control for mineral concentrates — standardisation, heavy-metal testing and certifications that protect your product.
Read moreHow We Source Our Trace Minerals
How Coremin sources trace minerals — a single, controlled Great Salt Lake origin with decades of responsible harvesting.
Read moreRO Water vs Mineralized Water
RO water vs mineralized water — what reverse osmosis removes, why it tastes flat, and how remineralization restores balance.
Read moreIonic vs Colloidal Minerals
Ionic vs colloidal minerals — the difference in form, solubility and absorption, and what it means for water and beverage products.
Read moreMineral Composition of the Great Salt Lake
An overview of the mineral composition of the Great Salt Lake — the major, trace and ultra-trace elements in its brine.
Read moreGreat Salt Lake vs Seawater Minerals
How Great Salt Lake minerals differ from ordinary seawater minerals — concentration, profile and suitability as an ingredient.
Read moreHow Great Salt Lake Minerals Are Produced
From inland-sea brine to standardised mineral concentrate — the natural, solar-assisted production process behind Coremin’s minerals.
Read moreGreat Salt Lake Trace Minerals
The trace and ultra-trace minerals of the Great Salt Lake — and why their natural, ionic balance matters for formulators.
Read moreGreat Salt Lake Minerals: A Complete Guide
A complete guide to Great Salt Lake minerals — what they are, why the lake is so mineral-rich, and how they are used as B2B ingredients.
Read moreChoosing A Mineral Concentrate Supplier
Source, consistency, certifications and supply reliability separate a true mineral concentrate manufacturer from a reseller.
Read moreMineral Ingredients For Cosmetics
Natural ionic minerals are valuable actives in skincare, hair care and personal care — supporting clean-label, mineral-rich formulations.
Read moreIndustrial Uses Of Trace Minerals
Beyond drinking water, trace minerals serve beverage, nutraceutical, cosmetic and food-fortification industries as a versatile ingredient.
Read moreElectrolyte Minerals Explained
Sodium, potassium, magnesium and chloride are the key electrolytes. Learn how natural electrolyte minerals power hydration products.
Read moreCalcium And Water Quality
Calcium influences water taste, hardness and compliance. Here’s how it fits into a balanced remineralization strategy.
Read moreMagnesium In Drinking Water
Magnesium is one of the most important minerals in drinking water — for taste, balance and regulatory mineral-content requirements.
Read moreWhy Bottled Water Brands Add Minerals
From taste and premiumization to compliance, here’s why leading bottled-water brands add minerals to their products.
Read moreUnderstanding Mineral Fortification
Mineral fortification enriches foods and beverages with essential minerals. Natural ionic complexes make it cleaner and more bioavailable.
Read moreMinerals For Premium Hospitality Water
Hotels are turning in-house water into a premium, branded, source-to-glass experience using natural mineral technology.
Read moreWater Taste Improvement Through Remineralization
Minerals shape how water tastes. Remineralization restores the rounded, refreshing mouthfeel that demineralized water loses.
Read moreTrace Minerals In Functional Beverages
Functional beverage brands use trace minerals and electrolytes to deliver hydration, wellness and clean-label differentiation.
Read moreHow Mineral Drops Are Manufactured
From inland-sea brine to a tested, standardized ionic concentrate — how natural concentrated mineral drops are made.
Read moreNatural vs Synthetic Mineral Concentrates
Natural ionic concentrates offer balance, bioavailability and a clean-label story that synthetic mineral salts struggle to match.
Read moreBenefits Of Water Remineralization
Remineralization improves taste, supports a premium mineral identity, and helps brands meet mineral-content regulations.
Read moreMinerals Commonly Added To Bottled Water
Calcium, magnesium, potassium and bicarbonates are the minerals most often added to bottled and packaged water — for taste, balance and compliance.
Read moreFull-Spectrum Trace Minerals Explained
“Full spectrum” means the complete, naturally balanced mineral profile — 70+ elements as they occur together in nature, not isolated salts.
Read moreTrace Minerals vs Electrolytes
Electrolytes are a subset of minerals that carry charge in solution. Here’s how trace minerals and electrolytes relate in beverages and hydration.
Read moreWhy RO Water Needs Remineralization
Reverse-osmosis purification removes beneficial minerals along with contaminants. Remineralization restores taste, balance and regulatory compliance.
Read moreWhat Are Concentrated Mineral Drops?
Concentrated mineral drops (CMD) are a liquid ionic trace-mineral concentrate — a few drops re-mineralize a litre of purified or RO water.
Read moreWhat Are Ionic Trace Minerals?
Ionic trace minerals are dissolved, electrically charged minerals — the natural, readily absorbed form used to enrich water, beverages and formulations.
Read moreHave a formulation challenge?
Our application team can help you specify the right mineral solution — request samples, technical data, or a call.