Sodium Dehydroacetate. Frisk: Mica

TL;DR. This ingredient is a preservative that helps control bacteria, yeast, and mold in water-containing formulas. It is often used with other preservatives to broaden antimicrobial coverage.

What does Sodium Dehydroacetate. Frisk: Mica do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a preservative that helps control bacteria, yeast, and mold in water-containing formulas. It is often used with other preservatives to broaden antimicrobial coverage.

Is Sodium Dehydroacetate. Frisk: Mica clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally well accepted because it has low sensitization potential at cosmetic use levels and is not a major allergen flag. Regulations typically cap its use, so formulators use it at low percentages and within product-type limits.

Is Sodium Dehydroacetate. Frisk: Mica sustainable?

This material is usually made synthetically rather than from a renewable plant feedstock. It is used at low levels and is considered biodegradable, with less persistence concern than many long-chain or silicone-based materials.

Is Sodium Dehydroacetate. Frisk: Mica COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS natural and organic standards as an allowed preservative, subject to concentration and formulation limits. Its Green Chemistry profile is solid on low-dose use and biodegradability, although its typical synthetic sourcing is not ideal from a renewable-feedstock view.

How does Sodium Dehydroacetate. Frisk: Mica work chemically?

The molecule is a sodium salt form of a small organic preservative acid, which improves water compatibility compared with the free acid form. In the EU, total use is limited to 0.6% calculated as the acid, and performance is best in mildly acidic to near-neutral systems where it is often paired with boosters or complementary preservatives.

Last updated 2026-05-15