Malachite

TL;DR. This ingredient is used mainly as a green mineral colorant or visual additive in color cosmetics, powders, and specialty skin care. It may also be used for a trace-mineral positioning, but its practical formulation role is pigmentary.

What does Malachite do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used mainly as a green mineral colorant or visual additive in color cosmetics, powders, and specialty skin care. It may also be used for a trace-mineral positioning, but its practical formulation role is pigmentary.

Is Malachite clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is acceptable only when purity, particle size, and contaminant specifications are well controlled. The main scrutiny is around mined-mineral impurities and inhalable powder exposure, not typical intact-skin use in a finished formula.

Is Malachite sustainable?

This material is mined, nonrenewable, and not biodegradable in the usual organic-material sense. Its environmental profile depends heavily on responsible sourcing, dust control, and limits on soluble metal impurities.

Is Malachite COSMOS-approved?

It can fit COSMOS-natural only when supplied as a permitted mineral raw material with compliant physical processing and contaminant controls, and it does not contribute organic content in COSMOS-organic formulas. From a Green Chemistry view, it benefits from simple mineral processing but is limited by nonrenewable sourcing and lack of biodegradability.

How does Malachite work chemically?

This compound is an inorganic copper-containing carbonate hydroxide mineral in a crystalline lattice, so it behaves as an insoluble particulate rather than a dissolved active. It is dispersed into oils, powders, or emulsions, is sensitive to strongly acidic conditions, and requires formulation checks for color stability, particle size, and trace-metal specifications.

Last updated 2026-05-13