C10-C18 TRIGLYCERIDES

TL;DR. This ingredient functions mainly as an emollient and skin-conditioning lipid, giving formulas slip, cushion, and a lighter oil feel. It can also help dissolve or disperse oil-soluble actives, pigments, and fragrance components.

What does C10-C18 TRIGLYCERIDES do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient functions mainly as an emollient and skin-conditioning lipid, giving formulas slip, cushion, and a lighter oil feel. It can also help dissolve or disperse oil-soluble actives, pigments, and fragrance components.

Is C10-C18 TRIGLYCERIDES clean?

This ingredient is generally well tolerated, low in sensitization concern, and not a common clean-standard restricted material. Clean-beauty scrutiny is usually about sourcing transparency rather than skin compatibility.

Is C10-C18 TRIGLYCERIDES sustainable?

This material is typically made from plant-derived fatty acids, often from coconut, palm, or palm-kernel supply chains. It is readily biodegradable, but its sourcing profile depends on certified, traceable agricultural inputs.

Is C10-C18 TRIGLYCERIDES COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and can fit COSMOS-organic formulas when the agricultural feedstocks and processing route meet the standard. Its Green Chemistry profile is strong because it is renewable, biodegradable, and made through relatively simple ester chemistry.

How does C10-C18 TRIGLYCERIDES work chemically?

The molecule class is a neutral ester blend built from glycerol and medium-to-long-chain fatty acid chains, which gives it high oil solubility, low polarity, and good oxidative stability compared with more unsaturated plant oils. Typical use ranges from about 1% to 30% depending on whether it is acting as a light emollient, carrier phase, or dispersion medium, and it is broadly pH-stable because it sits in the oil phase.

Last updated 2026-05-14