Sucrose Dilaurate

TL;DR. This ingredient is a nonionic emulsifier and mild surfactant used to help oil and water stay dispersed. It can support cleansing systems, creams, lotions, and rinse-off formulas without adding strong detergency.

What does Sucrose Dilaurate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a nonionic emulsifier and mild surfactant used to help oil and water stay dispersed. It can support cleansing systems, creams, lotions, and rinse-off formulas without adding strong detergency.

Is Sucrose Dilaurate clean?

Clean-beauty frameworks generally view it as low concern, with a mild skin feel and no major restricted-list friction. Sensitivity is possible with almost any surfactant, but it is not a common fragrance allergen or formaldehyde-releasing preservative.

Is Sucrose Dilaurate sustainable?

This material is typically made from sugar and C12 fatty acids, often from coconut, palm kernel, or other vegetable oils. It is expected to be biodegradable, with the main sustainability question being traceable sourcing for tropical oil feedstocks.

Is Sucrose Dilaurate COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic formulations when produced from permitted feedstocks and approved processing routes. From a Green Chemistry lens, it fits well because it uses renewable carbon, has low persistence, and can replace harsher surfactant systems.

How does Sucrose Dilaurate work chemically?

The molecule is a nonionic sugar ester with two C12 fatty-acyl chains attached to a disaccharide core, giving it both oil-compatible and water-compatible regions. It is commonly used around 0.5 to 5% as a co-emulsifier or mild surfactant, and it is usually most stable in mildly acidic to neutral formulas rather than strongly acidic or strongly alkaline systems.

Last updated 2026-05-15