Thank you very much for the answers, I really appreciate them!
I am sorry for opening a new discussion for the same problem, as now, I saw this question has already been asked here numerous times before.
Link to other threads with the same question:
Ultimately we can all give opinions but you won’t know without challenge testing.
Very true! But cosmetic formulating is like a side hobby for me at the moment, not my specialty, and a challenge test where I live seem to cost around 240 USD dollars. Is this a normal price for CT’s?
What kind of water are you using (distilled, deionized, boiled)? Zinc
can promote yeast growth but I’m no expert in that subject so I don’t
know if your 1% is troublesome or not.
I am using distilled water. I do not know the exact effect of zinc sulfate on fungus, although other forms of zinc (pyrithione & oxide) seem to be used as a antibacterial & anti-fungal agents in cosmetics.
12% ethanol will keep most but not all germs from growing and it won’t kill any.
The
2% glycerol are, at that concentration, bug food at best whereas zinc
sulfate at 1% hampers microbial growth (likely not of all but of many).
The 0.4% phenoxyethanol should put your product in a safe spot.
Thank you for the answer!
BTW most scientific and most older literature uses the term nonionic
surfactant for PEG derivatives. The inhibitory effect of modern
nonionics on preservatives is largely unknown.
I looked trough a large part of products containing polysorbates, and most of them use exactly phenoxytanol as a main preservative, some with the addition of an another one e.g. potassium sorbate. So maybe there is some truth about this “deactivation”, but it is mostly exaggerated?
Is it a spray? Else, I concur with
@chemicalmatt: Why a surfactant?
Well, yes, it is a spray, but I use it in a glass bottle with a dropper to apply it more efficiently at my follicles, but it can be used in a spray bottle also. I honestly don’t know whether I need a surfactant or not. The spreadability of my product is awful. It sprinkles when I try to rub it in, and it doesn’t spread evenly though the scalp.
I read that surfactants lower the surface tension and aid in the spreadability of products when applied to the skin and thought that maybe this is what I need? Should I use something different? Maybe a thickener, xanthan gum?
Thank you!