and Essential Oils

TL;DR. This ingredient is used primarily as a scent component, with secondary roles in masking base odors and shaping the sensory profile of a formula.

What does and Essential Oils do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used primarily as a scent component, with secondary roles in masking base odors and shaping the sensory profile of a formula.

Is and Essential Oils clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it sits in a yellow zone because it can contain labeled allergens and oxidation-prone aroma compounds. It is acceptable in many clean frameworks when disclosed, used at appropriate levels, and managed for sensitization risk.

Is and Essential Oils sustainable?

This material is plant-derived, but its footprint depends heavily on crop choice, yield, land use, irrigation, and distillation energy. Many components are biodegradable, though high-volume botanical sourcing can create supply-chain pressure.

Is and Essential Oils COSMOS-approved?

It is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when derived from approved natural processes and compliant with allergen disclosure rules. Its Green Chemistry fit is mixed: renewable feedstocks are a plus, while steam distillation energy, low yields, and oxidation management are practical tradeoffs.

How does and Essential Oils work chemically?

This material is a complex mixture of low-molecular-weight volatile terpenes, terpenoids, phenylpropanoids, and related aroma molecules. Use levels often range from trace amounts to about 1 percent in leave-on products, depending on the formula type and IFRA-style exposure limits, and the main stability concern is air, light, and heat-driven oxidation.

Last updated 2026-05-13