Glycolipids ●
TL;DR. This ingredient primarily functions as a mild surfactant, helping water lift oil, sunscreen, makeup, and soil from skin or hair. It can also support foam, emulsification, and a softer after-feel in cleansing formulas.
What does Glycolipids do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient primarily functions as a mild surfactant, helping water lift oil, sunscreen, makeup, and soil from skin or hair. It can also support foam, emulsification, and a softer after-feel in cleansing formulas.
Is Glycolipids clean?
From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally well tolerated and has little restricted-list friction when properly purified. As with many surfactants, eye sting or dryness can occur at higher active levels or in poorly buffered formulas.
Is Glycolipids sustainable?
This material is commonly made by fermentation using sugar and plant-oil feedstocks, which gives it a better renewable-sourcing profile than many petrochemical surfactants. It is generally considered readily biodegradable, with feedstock choices such as palm-derived oils being the main supply-chain detail to check.
Is Glycolipids COSMOS-approved?
It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural standards when produced by accepted fermentation and processing methods, and it can fit COSMOS-organic formulas depending on the certified status of the feedstocks and final blend. Its Green Chemistry profile is strong because it can use renewable inputs, aqueous fermentation, mild processing, and biodegradable chemistry.
How does Glycolipids work chemically?
This material is an amphiphilic family made from carbohydrate head groups linked to fatty acid or hydroxy-fatty-acid chains, which lets the molecule lower surface tension and form micelles. Typical rinse-off use is often around 0.5% to 10% active matter, with best performance set by pH, electrolyte load, co-surfactants, and preservation rather than by the molecule alone.
Last updated 2026-05-13