Cannabinol

TL;DR. It is used mainly as a skin-conditioning and antioxidant active, most often in oils, balms, and targeted treatment products rather than as a structural formulation ingredient.

What does Cannabinol do in a cosmetic formula?

It is used mainly as a skin-conditioning and antioxidant active, most often in oils, balms, and targeted treatment products rather than as a structural formulation ingredient.

Is Cannabinol clean?

Clean standards tend to treat it as a hemp-derived active with regulatory and documentation sensitivities rather than a high-irritation ingredient. Brands need tight specifications for residual solvents, pesticide residues, heavy metals, and controlled-cannabinoid cross-contamination.

Is Cannabinol sustainable?

It can be obtained from plant biomass or made by controlled conversion, then purified, so the footprint depends heavily on cultivation inputs, extraction solvent, and purification load. Environmental fate data are limited, and its hydrophobic structure suggests lower water solubility and slower biodegradation than simple plant oils or sugars.

Is Cannabinol COSMOS-approved?

It may fit COSMOS only when sourced and processed through permitted natural routes and when the finished raw material meets contaminant and solvent limits. From a Green Chemistry lens, renewable feedstock is a plus, but heavy purification, solvent use, and limited biodegradation data make the profile mixed.

How does Cannabinol work chemically?

The molecule is a neutral, lipophilic phenolic compound with a high affinity for oil phases and limited practical solubility in water. It is typically formulated in anhydrous or emulsified systems, with attention to light, oxygen, heat, and antioxidant support because oxidized phenolic materials can shift color and potency over time.

Last updated 2026-05-16