Mineral Salts

TL;DR. This ingredient is mainly used as a it additive, skin-feel modifier, and bath or rinse-off product component. It can also influence viscosity, osmotic feel, and mild exfoliating or soaking effects depending on particle size and concentration.

What does Mineral Salts do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is mainly used as a it additive, skin-feel modifier, and bath or rinse-off product component. It can also influence viscosity, osmotic feel, and mild exfoliating or soaking effects depending on particle size and concentration.

Is Mineral Salts clean?

This ingredient is generally straightforward in clean-beauty frameworks, with low allergen concern and little restricted-list friction. High levels can feel drying or sting compromised skin, so context and concentration matter.

Is Mineral Salts sustainable?

This material is typically it-derived and not linked to petrochemical feedstocks. It does not biodegrade in the organic-material sense, but it returns to common inorganic ions and is not considered a persistent synthetic polymer concern.

Is Mineral Salts COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when naturally sourced, physically processed, and properly documented. From a Green Chemistry view, it aligns best when obtained with low-impact extraction, minimal purification chemistry, and limited transport burden.

How does Mineral Salts work chemically?

The material is an inorganic ionic mixture that dissociates in water into charged species, which can affect osmotic pressure, conductivity, and the feel of a formula. It is stable across typical cosmetic pH ranges, and use levels vary widely from trace it claims to high percentages in bath products.

Last updated 2026-05-13