Polyglyceryl-6 Dicaprate ●
TL;DR. This ingredient is a nonionic emulsifier and solubilizer, helping blend oils, fragrance components, and oil-soluble actives into water-based formulas. It is also used as a mild cleansing booster in micellar waters, gels, and gentle rinse-off products.
What does Polyglyceryl-6 Dicaprate do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient is a nonionic emulsifier and solubilizer, helping blend oils, fragrance components, and oil-soluble actives into water-based formulas. It is also used as a mild cleansing booster in micellar waters, gels, and gentle rinse-off products.
Is Polyglyceryl-6 Dicaprate clean?
From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally well-tolerated, with low sensitization concern and little restricted-list friction. As with many surface-active materials, higher use levels may cause eye sting or dryness depending on the full formula.
Is Polyglyceryl-6 Dicaprate sustainable?
This material is commonly made from glycerin and medium-chain fatty acids that can come from coconut, palm kernel, or other vegetable sources. It is expected to be biodegradable, with the main sustainability caveat being traceability of tropical oil feedstocks.
Is Polyglyceryl-6 Dicaprate COSMOS-approved?
It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when the feedstocks and manufacturing route meet standard requirements. Its fit with Green Chemistry is strong when made from renewable inputs through esterification, with good biodegradability and no major persistence concern.
How does Polyglyceryl-6 Dicaprate work chemically?
The molecule is an amphiphilic nonionic ester, built from a glycerin-derived backbone with roughly two C10 fatty acid chains on average, giving it both water-compatible and oil-compatible character. It is typically used around 0.5% to 5% for solubilizing, cleansing support, or emulsification, and ester bonds are generally most stable in mildly acidic to neutral formulas rather than very high or very low pH systems.
Last updated 2026-05-13