Caprylyl/Capryl Glucoside. Glyceryl Stearate SE

TL;DR. This ingredient functions mainly as a mild nonionic surfactant, solubilizer, and emulsifying support. It helps disperse oils, fragrance components, and oily actives into water-based formulas while contributing to cleansing or emulsion stability.

What does Caprylyl/Capryl Glucoside. Glyceryl Stearate SE do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient functions mainly as a mild nonionic surfactant, solubilizer, and emulsifying support. It helps disperse oils, fragrance components, and oily actives into water-based formulas while contributing to cleansing or emulsion stability.

Is Caprylyl/Capryl Glucoside. Glyceryl Stearate SE clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally well accepted and not a common restricted-list issue. Like many surfactants, it can cause eye or skin discomfort at higher levels or in low-rinse formulas, but it is typically considered low concern when formulated appropriately.

Is Caprylyl/Capryl Glucoside. Glyceryl Stearate SE sustainable?

This material is commonly made from plant-derived sugars, fatty alcohols, glycerin, and fatty acids, with coconut, palm, or rapeseed supply chains depending on the manufacturer. It is expected to be readily biodegradable, though palm-linked sourcing may require supplier documentation for stronger sustainability claims.

Is Caprylyl/Capryl Glucoside. Glyceryl Stearate SE COSMOS-approved?

This ingredient is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic frameworks when made from accepted feedstocks and compliant processing. It fits Green Chemistry well through renewable inputs, biodegradability, and efficient surfactant performance without persistent silicone or fluorinated chemistry.

How does Caprylyl/Capryl Glucoside. Glyceryl Stearate SE work chemically?

Chemically, this material combines a C8-C10 sugar-based nonionic surfactant with a self-emulsifying glycerol fatty-acid ester system, giving both solubilizing power and oil-in-water emulsion support. Typical use ranges are about 0.5 to 5% for solubilizing or emulsifying support, with stability usually best in mildly acidic to neutral systems and with irritation managed by total surfactant load.

Last updated 2026-05-13