Alcohol Denat. Vp/Va Copolymer

TL;DR. This ingredient acts as a fast-drying carrier plus film-forming resin, most often used in hair sprays, styling gels, mascaras, and setting products. It helps deposit a flexible hold film while the volatile portion flashes off quickly.

What does Alcohol Denat. Vp/Va Copolymer do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient acts as a fast-drying carrier plus film-forming resin, most often used in hair sprays, styling gels, mascaras, and setting products. It helps deposit a flexible hold film while the volatile portion flashes off quickly.

Is Alcohol Denat. Vp/Va Copolymer clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it has friction because the volatile portion can feel drying or sting on compromised skin, and the synthetic film former is often limited by stricter polymer policies. It is more acceptable in rinse-off or hair styling contexts than in leave-on facial care.

Is Alcohol Denat. Vp/Va Copolymer sustainable?

This material is typically partly fossil-derived, although the volatile carrier can also come from fermentation depending on sourcing. The volatile portion breaks down readily, while the film-forming polymer is not generally considered readily biodegradable and may raise water-system persistence questions.

Is Alcohol Denat. Vp/Va Copolymer COSMOS-approved?

It is not aligned with COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic as a complete material because the synthetic film-forming polymer is not permitted for standard natural formulations. Its Green Chemistry profile is mixed, with useful performance at low levels but limited renewable feedstock alignment and weak biodegradability for the polymer fraction.

How does Alcohol Denat. Vp/Va Copolymer work chemically?

This ingredient combines a low-molecular-weight volatile carrier with a nonionic synthetic copolymer that forms clear, flexible films as the carrier evaporates. Typical styling products use the film former at roughly 1 to 10 percent active, and performance depends on solvent balance, humidity resistance, plasticizers, and neutral compatibility with other resins.

Last updated 2026-05-15