Linoleic/Oleic/Palmitic Triglyceride

TL;DR. This ingredient functions primarily as an emollient lipid, adding softness, slip, and cushion to creams, balms, oils, and color cosmetics. It also helps reduce the greasy feel of richer oils and supports barrier feel on skin.

What does Linoleic/Oleic/Palmitic Triglyceride do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient functions primarily as an emollient lipid, adding softness, slip, and cushion to creams, balms, oils, and color cosmetics. It also helps reduce the greasy feel of richer oils and supports barrier feel on skin.

Is Linoleic/Oleic/Palmitic Triglyceride clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally well tolerated, low in irritation potential, and not a common restricted-list concern. The main quality point is freshness, since unsaturated lipid portions can oxidize if the raw material is poorly stored or underprotected.

Is Linoleic/Oleic/Palmitic Triglyceride sustainable?

This material is usually plant-derived and readily biodegradable, with a relatively straightforward end-of-life profile. Sustainability depends on the oil feedstock, especially whether any palm-linked supply is certified or traceable.

Is Linoleic/Oleic/Palmitic Triglyceride COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when made from approved vegetable sources and processed with permitted esterification or refining steps. It fits Green Chemistry well when renewable feedstocks, low-residue processing, and antioxidant-supported stability are used.

How does Linoleic/Oleic/Palmitic Triglyceride work chemically?

Chemically, it is a glycerol triester carrying a mix of C16 to C18 saturated and unsaturated fatty acid chains, which gives it a liquid-to-soft lipid profile and good skin spread. It is typically used as part of the oil phase, often in the low single digits up to much higher levels in anhydrous formulas, and benefits from antioxidants such as tocopherol to slow rancidity.

Last updated 2026-05-15