Linalool. VCS02-L23

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily a fragrance component, used to add a floral, citrus, lavender-like note to formulas. It can appear in perfumes, essential-oil blends, deodorants, hair care, and skin care at low levels.

What does Linalool. VCS02-L23 do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily a fragrance component, used to add a floral, citrus, lavender-like note to formulas. It can appear in perfumes, essential-oil blends, deodorants, hair care, and skin care at low levels.

Is Linalool. VCS02-L23 clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient has some friction because it is a regulated fragrance allergen and can trigger sensitization in susceptible users, especially after oxidation. It is not inherently controversial at very low, well-controlled fragrance levels, but disclosure and freshness matter.

Is Linalool. VCS02-L23 sustainable?

This material can be sourced from plant essential oils or made synthetically, so its sustainability profile depends on origin and supply chain. It is generally considered readily biodegradable, but as a volatile fragrance molecule it can contribute to fragrance-related air emissions during use.

Is Linalool. VCS02-L23 COSMOS-approved?

It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when it comes from compliant natural fragrance raw materials and meets fragrance allergen disclosure requirements. It aligns moderately with Green Chemistry when renewable-sourced and readily biodegradable, but oxidation sensitivity and synthetic petrochemical routes lower the score.

How does Linalool. VCS02-L23 work chemically?

The molecule is an acyclic monoterpene alcohol with two double bonds and a tertiary alcohol group, which gives it fragrance volatility and oxidation sensitivity. In finished products it is usually present as a trace fragrance constituent, often below 0.1% in leave-on skin care, and air, heat, and light can convert it into hydroperoxides with higher sensitization potential.

Last updated 2026-05-16