Silicate mineral

TL;DR. This ingredient is used as an absorbent, bulking agent, slip modifier, and mild abrasive in powders, masks, cleansers, and color cosmetics. It can also help reduce tack and improve payoff in anhydrous or powder formats.

What does Silicate mineral do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used as an absorbent, bulking agent, slip modifier, and mild abrasive in powders, masks, cleansers, and color cosmetics. It can also help reduce tack and improve payoff in anhydrous or powder formats.

Is Silicate mineral clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally acceptable when purified and tested, with low skin reactivity because it is largely inert. The main concern is quality control, especially limits for respirable crystalline contamination and trace heavy metals in mined powders.

Is Silicate mineral sustainable?

This material is typically mined, so its footprint depends on quarry practices, land disturbance, dust management, and traceability. It is not biodegradable in the organic sense, but it is an inorganic material that does not break down into microplastic-like residues.

Is Silicate mineral COSMOS-approved?

It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic frameworks when it is naturally sourced and processed only by allowed physical methods. Its Green Chemistry fit is mixed, with simple processing and high stability, but non-renewable sourcing and no true biodegradation.

How does Silicate mineral work chemically?

This compound is an inorganic solid built from tetrahedral silicon-oxygen units combined with metals such as aluminum, magnesium, calcium, sodium, or potassium, which gives it high thermal and chemical stability. Use levels vary widely by format, from low single digits for texture adjustment to much higher levels in powders, masks, and abrasive cleansers, and performance depends strongly on particle size, shape, and purity.

Last updated 2026-05-13