Polycitronellol Acetate

TL;DR. This ingredient is an emollient and conditioning film-former used to add slip, gloss, frizz control, and a light silicone-like feel in hair and skin formulas.

What does Polycitronellol Acetate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is an emollient and conditioning film-former used to add slip, gloss, frizz control, and a light silicone-like feel in hair and skin formulas.

Is Polycitronellol Acetate clean?

Clean programs usually view it more favorably than cyclic silicone fluids because it is nonvolatile, low-odor, and not a listed fragrance allergen in polymer form. The main caveat is its synthetic polymer status and the smaller public safety history compared with older emollients.

Is Polycitronellol Acetate sustainable?

This material is commonly made from renewable terpene feedstocks rather than petroleum-derived silicone chemistry. Supplier data position it as biodegradable, but the sustainability case still depends on feedstock traceability, manufacturing route, and third-party documentation.

Is Polycitronellol Acetate COSMOS-approved?

It is not a standard COSMOS-natural mainstay, and acceptance depends on supplier certification plus whether the polymerization and esterification route fits allowed processing rules. From a Green Chemistry view, it has useful advantages through renewable feedstock and biodegradability, but it remains a chemically modified polymer.

How does Polycitronellol Acetate work chemically?

The molecule is a high-molecular-weight esterified polyterpene, which reduces volatility while providing slip, gloss, and flexible film formation. Supplier guidance generally places it in the low single-digit to about 10% range, with good compatibility in anhydrous and emulsion systems and no pH-driven instability expected in normal cosmetic use.

Last updated 2026-05-13