Home Cosmetic Science Talk Formulating Hydroxyethylcellulose and CAPB

  • Hydroxyethylcellulose and CAPB

    Posted by tecnico3vinia on January 30, 2023 at 12:06 pm

    Hi there! 

    Last week I was at the lab formulating a very basic shampoo formulation with a client, using hydroxyethylcellulose (HEC), sodium laureth sulfate and cocamidopropyl betaine (CAPB).

    The thing is, we noticed that the formulation was losing viscosity when we added the preservative at the end of the process (caprylyl glycol and phenoxyethanol blend solubilized in cocoamidopropyl betaine).

    Our first bet was that HEC was incompatible with the preservative system. So we did a test adding other preservative that we had in the lab (without solubilizng in CAPB) and the viscosity loss didn’t happened. Then we did other test adding just CAPB at the end of the process, without the preservative system and the viscosity loss happened. So we thought that HEC was actually incompatible with CAPB, not the preservative system.

    After that I did a quick research in the forum and saw some discussions saying that HEC is incompatible with surfactants. Is that correct? Is it incompatible with a certain percentage of active matter or just some specific classes (e.g glucosides, betaines)? 

    I also wanna conduct some tests here in the lab using other surfactants and other concentrations of active matter. When I get some results I’ll bring it here too.

    Kind regards,

    chemistdee replied 1 year, 3 months ago 3 Members · 2 Replies
  • 2 Replies
  • ozgirl

    Member
    February 6, 2023 at 4:25 pm

    I don’t use HEC so I can’t offer any help there but did you consider that CAPB generally contains a significant amount of salt (NaCl). The extra salt could be pushing you to the other side of the salt curve and thus reducing viscosity in the process.

    If you post your formula you may get extra help.

    Hope this helps????

  • chemistdee

    Member
    September 18, 2023 at 12:22 am

    Any updates on this? I am also observing the same with HEC. When adding CAPB to the formula containing HEC, the viscosity is lost.

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