SURFACTANTS

Surfactants in Cosmetics
Surfactants are functional ingredients used in cosmetic and personal care formulations to cleanse, solubilize, emulsify, and stabilize products. They work by reducing surface tension between oil and water, allowing oil-based soils, makeup, and impurities to be lifted from the skin or hair and rinsed away with water.
In cosmetics, surfactants are commonly classified as anionic, nonionic, amphoteric, or cationic, each selected based on cleansing strength, mildness, and compatibility with skin or hair. Mild surfactant systems are often blended to improve performance while minimizing irritation.
Typical usage levels range from 1–5% in facial cleansers and 5–15% in shampoos and body washes, depending on the formulation type and desired foam, cleansing efficacy, and skin feel. When properly formulated, surfactants provide effective cleansing while maintaining the skin’s natural barrier and sensory profile.
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Decyl Glucoside 30%

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Polysorbate 20

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Sodium Cocoyl Isethionate

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Sodium Lauryl Sulfate 35%

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Technical & Clean Standards Overview: Surfactants

Technical Definition & Functional Role

Surfactants (surface-active agents) are functional ingredients that reduce surface and interfacial tension between immiscible phases such as oil and water. Their amphiphilic molecular structure—comprising both hydrophilic and lipophilic segments—enables key formulation functions including cleansing, emulsification, solubilization, foaming, wetting, and dispersion.

In personal care and cosmetic formulations, surfactants are essential for effective soil and sebum removal, emulsion stability, controlled foam generation, improved rinseability, and overall product performance and sensorial attributes.


Surfactant Classification

Surfactants are commonly classified according to the ionic character of their hydrophilic head group:

  • Nonionic Surfactants
    No ionic charge; valued for broad formulation compatibility, pH stability, and mildness. Frequently used in gentle cleansers, solubilizers, and emulsified systems.

  • Anionic Surfactants
    Negatively charged; highly effective primary cleansers and foam generators. Often combined with secondary surfactants to optimize mildness.

  • Amphoteric (Zwitterionic) Surfactants
    Charge varies with pH; widely used to reduce irritation, enhance foam quality, and improve skin compatibility in surfactant systems.

  • Cationic Surfactants
    Positively charged; primarily used for conditioning, antistatic, and antimicrobial functions rather than primary cleansing.


Clean Standards & Safety Profile

Under modern Clean Standards frameworks, surfactants are evaluated beyond performance, with emphasis on toxicological safety, environmental impact, and regulatory compliance.

Clean-aligned surfactants typically demonstrate:

  • Favorable safety profiles, with low acute toxicity and controlled irritation potential when used within established limits

  • Exclusion of high-risk impurities, such as unacceptable levels of 1,4-dioxane, residual solvents, or heavy metals

  • Biodegradability and reduced aquatic toxicity, supporting environmental responsibility goals

  • Suitability for sensitive skin applications, often supported by historical use data, in-vitro testing, or finished-formula assessments

  • Compliance with global cosmetic regulations, including U.S. and EU cosmetic safety requirements

Many Clean Standards reference third-party hazard and safety screening methodologies to assess surfactants for carcinogenicity, reproductive toxicity, endocrine disruption potential, and environmental persistence.


Typical Usage Levels

Surfactant usage levels vary depending on surfactant class, formulation type, and desired performance:

  • Primary Cleansers (rinse-off products):
    ~5–30% total active surfactant matter (ASM), depending on product type and mildness goals

  • Secondary / Co-Surfactants:
    ~1–10%, used to enhance foam quality, reduce irritation, or improve skin feel

  • Nonionic Solubilizers (leave-on or fragrance systems):
    ~0.1–5%, depending on solubilization requirements

  • Amphoteric Surfactants (mildness boosters):
    ~2–10%, commonly paired with anionic surfactants

Actual use levels are formulation-dependent and are validated through stability testing, safety assessment, and performance evaluation in the finished product.


Formulation & Clean Label Considerations

Clean formulations frequently employ surfactant systems rather than single surfactants, leveraging synergistic blends to achieve effective cleansing while minimizing irritation potential. Selection criteria often include renewable feedstock sourcing, manufacturing transparency, and alignment with retailer-specific Clean Standards.

When used within recommended concentrations, Clean-compliant surfactants support product claims related to gentleness, responsible formulation, and consumer safety—without compromising functional efficacy.