Dibutyl Ethylhexanol Glutamide

TL;DR. This ingredient is a low-molecular-weight oil gelator and rheology modifier, used to thicken oils, stabilize anhydrous systems, and give balms, sticks, and clear gels a structured feel.

What does Dibutyl Ethylhexanol Glutamide do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a low-molecular-weight oil gelator and rheology modifier, used to thicken oils, stabilize anhydrous systems, and give balms, sticks, and clear gels a structured feel.

Is Dibutyl Ethylhexanol Glutamide clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally viewed as low-irritation and is not a common allergen or preservative-type sensitizer. The main caveat is that it is a specialized synthetic structuring agent, so acceptance depends on each standard’s rules for derivatized ingredients.

Is Dibutyl Ethylhexanol Glutamide sustainable?

This material is partly based on amino-acid chemistry, but its hydrophobic branches are typically made through more synthetic processing. It is used at low levels and can help replace harder-to-biodegrade film-forming or structuring materials, though public biodegradation data are limited.

Is Dibutyl Ethylhexanol Glutamide COSMOS-approved?

It does not have straightforward COSMOS-organic alignment unless supplier documentation confirms an approved natural-origin route and compliant processing. From a Green Chemistry lens, it has some positives from amino-acid-based design and low use levels, but the synthetic branching and limited biodegradation transparency keep it from a green tier.

How does Dibutyl Ethylhexanol Glutamide work chemically?

The molecule has a polar amide-rich core and bulky oil-loving alkyl groups, allowing it to self-assemble through hydrogen bonding into fine networks that immobilize oils. Typical use is roughly 0.1 to 3% in anhydrous oils, sticks, balms, and transparent gels, with heating needed for dissolution and cooling needed for gel formation.

Last updated 2026-05-15