Hydrogenated Polydicyclopentadiene

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily a film-forming and texture-building resin, used to add gloss, adhesion, payoff, and wear in lip color, sticks, and other anhydrous formulas.

What does Hydrogenated Polydicyclopentadiene do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily a film-forming and texture-building resin, used to add gloss, adhesion, payoff, and wear in lip color, sticks, and other anhydrous formulas.

Is Hydrogenated Polydicyclopentadiene clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this material has friction because it is a synthetic, plastic-like film former rather than a simple biodegradable emollient. It is generally considered low-irritation on skin, but its restricted-list concern is more about polymer category and persistence than sensitization.

Is Hydrogenated Polydicyclopentadiene sustainable?

This material is typically petroleum-derived and is not readily biodegradable. Its environmental profile is limited by nonrenewable sourcing and likely persistence after rinse-off or disposal.

Is Hydrogenated Polydicyclopentadiene COSMOS-approved?

It is not aligned with COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic standards because it is a synthetic petrochemical polymer outside the allowed natural-derived ingredient framework. From a Green Chemistry view, its inertness and oxidation stability are practical strengths, while nonrenewable feedstock and limited biodegradability are the main drawbacks.

How does Hydrogenated Polydicyclopentadiene work chemically?

The molecule is a saturated, nonpolar hydrocarbon resin made by hydrogenating a cyclic olefin polymer, which gives it a glassy film-forming character and strong compatibility with oils, waxes, and hydrocarbon emollients. It is water-insoluble, largely pH-independent, and relatively oxidation-stable, so formulation issues are usually about solubility, melt processing, and sensory balance rather than acidity or preservative interactions.

Last updated 2026-05-13