Home › Cosmetic Science Talk › Formulating › Lactic vs Citric acid for ph in a gel cream
-
Lactic vs Citric acid for ph in a gel cream
Posted by GeorgeBenson on April 28, 2022 at 7:40 amIs there any reason to use one vs the other for lowering ph in and face gel cream? I am using Sepinov EMT 10 as emulsifier if that makes any difference. Thanks!
Pharma replied 2 years, 7 months ago 5 Members · 6 Replies -
6 Replies
-
Cost.
All though, my chemist suggested to me, that lactic is more skin friendly.
-
The smell can be a problem with lactic acid. especially in a face product if the Perfum is not strong enough.
The advantage of LActic acid is more skin-friendly and there is some evidence that it helps against microbes.
-
Ok good to know. So other than those differences mentioned neither one is better/worse for stability of the emulsion?
-
Citric acid is also completely skin friendly. But lactic acid has extra benefits like exfoliation and skin hydration.
Citric acid creates problems with cationic ingredients
-
Ive noticed that citric acid can lower the viscosity of emulsions made with some seppic polymers, would lactic acid also do this?
-
Lactic acid is less likely to interfere with other ingredients and hence is less likely to cause a drop in viscosity. Citric acid and cationics as an example are not the best combo whilst lactic acid would work.Lactic acid (given that you don’t use a super diluted form) also drops pH stronger per gram added. On the other hand, citric acid has a better buffering (something you usually don’t really need…) and an intermediate chelating capacity (wouldn’t rely solely on citric acid as chelate, though).
Log in to reply.