Hydrogenated Coconut Oil ●
TL;DR. This ingredient is an emollient and lipid-phase structurant that softens skin, reduces water loss, and adds firmness to creams, sticks, balms, and anhydrous formulas.
What does Hydrogenated Coconut Oil do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient is an emollient and lipid-phase structurant that softens skin, reduces water loss, and adds firmness to creams, sticks, balms, and anhydrous formulas.
Is Hydrogenated Coconut Oil clean?
This material is generally accepted by clean-beauty standards, with low irritation and low allergen concern in refined cosmetic grades. It can feel heavy on oily or blemish-prone skin, but it has no major restricted-list friction.
Is Hydrogenated Coconut Oil sustainable?
This ingredient is plant-derived from a tropical oil crop and is readily biodegradable. Its main sustainability variables are agricultural traceability, land use, and the energy and catalyst inputs used for saturation processing.
Is Hydrogenated Coconut Oil COSMOS-approved?
It is permitted under COSMOS natural and organic standards when made from compliant plant feedstocks and processed within the standard’s allowed chemistry. It fits Green Chemistry reasonably well because it uses renewable carbon and biodegrades, though the saturation step adds processing intensity.
How does Hydrogenated Coconut Oil work chemically?
This material is a highly saturated triglyceride blend, meaning most fatty-acid double bonds have been converted to single bonds, which improves oxidative stability and raises firmness versus the starting oil. It is commonly used around 1 to 10% in emulsions and higher in sticks or balms, with melting behavior typically in the low-30s to about 40°C depending on grade.
Last updated 2026-05-13