PPG-3 Benzyl Ether Myristate

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily an emollient ester and solvent, used to add slip, gloss, and cushion while helping disperse pigments and oil-soluble ingredients.

What does PPG-3 Benzyl Ether Myristate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily an emollient ester and solvent, used to add slip, gloss, and cushion while helping disperse pigments and oil-soluble ingredients.

Is PPG-3 Benzyl Ether Myristate clean?

This ingredient has clean-standard friction because it uses synthetic alkoxylated chemistry, which can raise residual monomer and processing-quality questions. It is generally expected to be low-irritation in finished formulas, but stricter clean frameworks may flag it based on chemistry rather than routine skin tolerance.

Is PPG-3 Benzyl Ether Myristate sustainable?

This material is typically partly petrochemical-derived, while its fatty portion may come from coconut or palm-kernel sources. Its ester linkage may support some biodegradation, but the synthetic polyether and aromatic portions make the end-of-life profile less aligned with simple plant-oil emollients.

Is PPG-3 Benzyl Ether Myristate COSMOS-approved?

It is generally not permitted under COSMOS natural or organic because the synthetic alkoxylated segment falls outside the standard’s preferred ingredient chemistry. From a Green Chemistry view, it can be formulation-efficient, but it has only partial renewable sourcing and limited public biodegradability data.

How does PPG-3 Benzyl Ether Myristate work chemically?

The molecule combines a C14 fatty-chain ester with an aromatic group and a short propylene-oxide-derived polyether segment, giving it both oil compatibility and a lighter, drier sensory profile than many straight fatty esters. It is typically used in anhydrous systems, emulsions, color cosmetics, and hair products, where ester hydrolysis can be more relevant under strongly acidic or alkaline conditions.

Last updated 2026-05-13