Salvia Sclera Essential Oil

TL;DR. This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a herbal, floral, slightly earthy scent to personal care formulas. It may also support the aromatic profile in massage oils, bath products, and leave-on skincare at low levels.

What does Salvia Sclera Essential Oil do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a herbal, floral, slightly earthy scent to personal care formulas. It may also support the aromatic profile in massage oils, bath products, and leave-on skincare at low levels.

Is Salvia Sclera Essential Oil clean?

This ingredient sits in the yellow zone because it is a natural fragrance material with recognized fragrance allergens and sensitization potential, especially after oxidation. Clean frameworks often allow it with IFRA compliance, allergen disclosure, and careful use-level control.

Is Salvia Sclera Essential Oil sustainable?

This material is plant-derived and usually produced by steam distillation, which is a relatively simple physical process but depends on agricultural inputs, crop yield, and distillation energy. Its volatile terpene components are generally biodegradable, though concentrated it oils can create aquatic-impact concerns before dilution and wastewater treatment.

Is Salvia Sclera Essential Oil COSMOS-approved?

It is generally permitted in COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic products when sourced and processed according to the standard, with fragrance allergen labeling where required. From a Green Chemistry view, it benefits from renewable sourcing and physical extraction, while its oxidation sensitivity and bioactive fragrance components keep it from being a fully uncomplicated choice.

How does Salvia Sclera Essential Oil work chemically?

It is a volatile botanical oil dominated by ester and monoterpene alcohol fractions, commonly including linalyl acetate and linalool, with smaller sesquiterpene components. In leave-on products it is typically used at fragrance-level concentrations, often below 1%, and it should be protected from air, heat, and light because oxidized terpene fractions can become more sensitizing.

Last updated 2026-05-13