Diethoxyethyl Succinate

TL;DR. This ingredient is mainly used as a lightweight emollient and solvent, especially to improve spread, slip, and dissolution of oil-soluble filters, fragrance components, or other lipophilic materials.

What does Diethoxyethyl Succinate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is mainly used as a lightweight emollient and solvent, especially to improve spread, slip, and dissolution of oil-soluble filters, fragrance components, or other lipophilic materials.

Is Diethoxyethyl Succinate clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally low-profile and not a common sensitizer, but it has some friction because it is a synthetic solvent-type ester. The main quality watchpoint is control of residual starting materials or processing impurities.

Is Diethoxyethyl Succinate sustainable?

This material is typically synthetic and may rely partly on petrochemical feedstocks, although the it portion can be bio-based depending on the supplier. Ester structures of this type are generally expected to biodegrade more readily than silicones or fluorinated materials.

Is Diethoxyethyl Succinate COSMOS-approved?

This ingredient is not a strong COSMOS-organic match and may have limited or conditional alignment depending on feedstock and manufacturing route. From a Green Chemistry view, it is a better fit when made with renewable it feedstock, efficient esterification, low residuals, and demonstrated biodegradability.

How does Diethoxyethyl Succinate work chemically?

The molecule is a diester with ether-containing side chains, giving it a balance of polarity and oil compatibility that helps solubilize difficult hydrophobic ingredients while leaving a dry, flexible skin feel. It is typically stable across normal cosmetic pH ranges and is best formulated with good impurity specifications and compatibility checks for oil-phase actives, fragrance, and packaging.

Last updated 2026-05-13