Pisum Sativum [Pea] Peptide

TL;DR. This ingredient is mainly a conditioning and film-forming active, helping hair feel smoother and skin feel more hydrated by leaving a lightweight protein-based layer.

What does Pisum Sativum [Pea] Peptide do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is mainly a conditioning and film-forming active, helping hair feel smoother and skin feel more hydrated by leaving a lightweight protein-based layer.

Is Pisum Sativum [Pea] Peptide clean?

In clean-beauty frameworks, this material is generally low-friction because it is plant-derived, non-fragrant, and typically used at low levels. Sensitivity is uncommon, though residual processing aids, preservation of the raw material, or source-protein allergy considerations can matter by supplier.

Is Pisum Sativum [Pea] Peptide sustainable?

This material comes from an agricultural protein stream and is generally biodegradable. Its sustainability profile is strongest when the crop source is responsibly grown and the hydrolysis process uses water, enzymes, and controlled waste streams.

Is Pisum Sativum [Pea] Peptide COSMOS-approved?

It is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when made by allowed physical, enzymatic, or hydrolysis processes and preserved with approved systems. It fits Green Chemistry well when sourced from renewable plant feedstock and processed in aqueous systems with limited solvent burden.

How does Pisum Sativum [Pea] Peptide work chemically?

It consists of low-molecular-weight amino acid chains generated by controlled hydrolysis of a seed storage protein, and suppliers often target fractions below a few thousand daltons for better solubility and deposition. Typical use levels are commonly about 0.1 to 5% as supplied, with good water solubility over mildly acidic to neutral pH, while high heat, strong oxidizers, or incompatible charged systems can shift color, odor, or clarity.

Last updated 2026-05-13