Volcanic Sand

TL;DR. This ingredient is used as a mineral exfoliant and abrasive, providing physical polishing in scrubs, cleansers, and body-care products. It can also add texture and mild absorbency to rinse-off formulas.

What does Volcanic Sand do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used as a mineral exfoliant and abrasive, providing physical polishing in scrubs, cleansers, and body-care products. It can also add texture and mild absorbency to rinse-off formulas.

Is Volcanic Sand clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally straightforward and not a common restricted-list concern. The main consideration is particle size and use pattern, since coarse or high-load particles can feel rough on sensitive or compromised skin.

Is Volcanic Sand sustainable?

This material is mineral-derived and typically obtained from naturally occurring deposits, so it is not renewable in the agricultural sense. It is inert and not a plastic microbead, but extraction, milling, and transport still carry local land-use and energy impacts.

Is Volcanic Sand COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic frameworks when sourced as a natural mineral and processed only with allowed physical methods. Its Green Chemistry fit is strongest on inertness and simple processing, with weaker alignment on renewability and biodegradability because minerals do not biodegrade like organic materials.

How does Volcanic Sand work chemically?

The molecule is not an organic molecule but an insoluble inorganic particulate, typically rich in silicate minerals, with exfoliating behavior driven by hardness, particle size, and edge geometry. It is stable across normal cosmetic pH ranges and is usually formulated as a suspended solid, often in low single-digit to around 10% levels for facial products and sometimes higher in body scrubs.

Last updated 2026-05-13