Silicon Ferment ●
TL;DR. This ingredient is used as a skin- and hair-conditioning additive, typically positioned as a mineral it active in water-based formulas. It is not a preservative, emulsifier, or surfactant.
What does Silicon Ferment do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient is used as a skin- and hair-conditioning additive, typically positioned as a mineral it active in water-based formulas. It is not a preservative, emulsifier, or surfactant.
Is Silicon Ferment clean?
It is generally low concern from a clean-beauty perspective and is not commonly flagged on major restricted lists. The main review points are supplier-specific, including fermentation substrate, residual minerals, carrier solvents, and added preservatives.
Is Silicon Ferment sustainable?
It is typically made through fermentation of a mineral-derived feedstock in an aqueous system, which can align well with lower-impact processing. Its overall footprint depends on fermentation inputs, energy use, and the carrier or preservation system supplied with the raw material.
Is Silicon Ferment COSMOS-approved?
This ingredient may be compatible with COSMOS-natural when the mineral source, fermentation process, carrier, and preservative package meet the standard’s allowed inputs. It fits Green Chemistry best when made in water, with renewable fermentation inputs, minimal purification burden, and good biodegradability of the organic carrier fraction.
How does Silicon Ferment work chemically?
The material is an aqueous fermentation-derived mixture containing soluble trace-mineral species complexed with small organic molecules, peptides, or polysaccharide fragments from the biomass, rather than a single defined molecule. Typical supplier use levels for mineral ferments are about 0.5% to 5%, often added to the water phase or cool-down below 40 to 45°C, with stability driven by pH, electrolyte load, and the supplied preservative system.
Last updated 2026-05-16