Dolomite

TL;DR. This ingredient is used as a mineral absorbent, bulking agent, opacifier, and mild abrasive, especially in powders, masks, scrubs, and some oral-care formats. It helps add slip, opacity, and a drier skin feel while increasing formula body.

What does Dolomite do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used as a mineral absorbent, bulking agent, opacifier, and mild abrasive, especially in powders, masks, scrubs, and some oral-care formats. It helps add slip, opacity, and a drier skin feel while increasing formula body.

Is Dolomite clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally straightforward and well tolerated when cosmetic-grade purity is controlled. The main quality checks are trace-metal specifications and limiting fine airborne particles in loose powders.

Is Dolomite sustainable?

This material is mined rather than grown, so its footprint depends on quarry practices, land disturbance, and local processing controls. It is an inert mineral and does not biodegrade, but it is not expected to bioaccumulate in the way many persistent synthetic organics can.

Is Dolomite COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic standards when sourced as an approved mineral ingredient and processed by permitted physical methods. Its Green Chemistry profile is strongest on low reactivity and simple processing, weaker on renewable sourcing because it comes from a nonrenewable mineral deposit.

How does Dolomite work chemically?

This material is an inorganic carbonate mineral built from calcium and magnesium ions arranged in a crystalline carbonate lattice. It is stable in dry and neutral-to-alkaline systems, can react with strong acids with carbon dioxide release, and use level depends heavily on format, from low single digits for texture to much higher levels in powders or abrasive systems.

Last updated 2026-05-13