Home › Cosmetic Science Talk › Formulating › Sulfate-free Shampoo
-
Sulfate-free Shampoo
Posted by Rrivet on October 1, 2018 at 7:01 pmThis is my current formula:
water q.s. Polyquat-10 1.00% Iselux 40.00% Optiphen Plus 1.00% Lavender Essential Oil 0.30% Salt 0.30% Proteol APL 2.00% Polysorbate 20 1.50% I’m trying to find something or things to add that might make it have a softer more conditioning feel on the hair. I have already researched a few things that might work (the samples are on the way). I just wanted to see if you lovely people might have anything you particularly like to add to shampoos that might be good, or just any advice to improve it. I appreciate any suggestions.
chemicalmatt replied 6 years, 1 month ago 9 Members · 16 Replies -
16 Replies
-
i find what works to get a softer shampoo is to do a mix of surfactants
-
Hello, out of curiosity I looked at Iselux: if it is “Sodium Lauroyl Methyl Isethionate” I do not think that you are achieving your goal of Sulfate free!
I like cocoglucosides, find them smooth in my formulations Good luck -
Are you referring to Iselux Ultra Mild (surfactant blend) rather than Iselux (Sodium Lauroyl Methyl Isethionate)??If you are using Iselux Ultra Mild you could try to decrease the concentration to arount 30% as Innospec suggests that the typical usage rate of that product is 25 to 30%. This might make the shampoo a little less cleansing but result in a more conditioned feel.Not sure what samples you are getting but you could try some quaternized
proteins (rice, wheat, soy etc) for a potential conditioning effect.@Max - Isethionates are considered sulfate free, they are however not sulphur free. -
Iselux is sulfate free. How do you support it being a sulfate?
-
Yes, but the general wisdom in Marketing is that they assign the problems to sulfates to ALS/ALES/SLS/SLES. As someone who knows Chemistry, you can attest that you couldn’t avoid everything that is broadly called a “sulfate” based solely on the IUPAC designation. I would wager you could likely name 5 or so exceptions (especially on biological systems) that technically contain an anion with the empirical formula SO 2−.Let’s pump the brakes. I dread the day we ban raw materials just for the presence of the ‘sulf’ in the name.Sulfates occur widely in everyday life.
-
I’m using Iselux SFS, which contains: Water (and) Sodium Lauroyl Methyl Isethionate (and) Cocamidopropyl Betaine (and) Sodium Cocoyl Isethionate (and) Sodium Methyl Oleoyl
-
Ain’t PQ-10 too much at 1%?
Assuming it’s 1% active ingredient.If you already tried PQ-10 and it ain’t conditioning enough for you,
then silicones are the next step.
If that fails too, then co-wash or cleansing conditioners seem unavoidable. -
Ah so now we find out.
Iselux SFS, OK.
Iselux has been quite active promoting that as an all-purpose sulphate-free product. I evaluated it, maybe a couple of years ago I think. As usual, I did a cost analysis. I found it to be a good product, but my price workup showed that I could easily formulate sulphate-free shampoos using a variety of other surfactants that were rather more cost-effective. -
To sulphonate or sarcosinate that is the question!!
-
@dr catherine sarcosinate seems to be my Achilles heel sadly been trying for some time to get the same foam profile with that as i get using my standard LGC sorb + CAPB + Disodium Cocoamphodiacetate.
-
Widget: drop the polysorbate 20 and add more amphoteric (CAPB works OK, though not the best) and that will allow better dilution-deposition of the polyquat-10 onto hair, and you will feel better. Gunther was right: that is a lot of cationic polymer to use, depending on what MW it is.
Log in to reply.