Home Cosmetic Science Talk Formulating Shampoo Formulating (for a first-timer)

  • Shampoo Formulating (for a first-timer)

    Posted by glachney on November 27, 2018 at 5:12 am

    Hey folks.

    This is my first time. Thanks a bunch for the thoughtful discussions
    here! I was hoping I could get some guidance and feedback on a shampoo formula.

    First let me be clear and say I’m not a chemist. Far from it
    actually. My degree field is in finance and I’ve worked in corporate finance my
    whole career. A few years back I discovered soap making as a hobby and
    absolutely buried myself in it. I love researching and reading. I became an obsessive
    soap nerd. Fast forward and I now run a little hobbyist business selling
    artisan shaving soap. It’s not serious (and I don’t want it to be), but it keeps my nights and weekends busy.

    Lately I’ve been super curious about the formulation of shampoo. I’m hoping to get some direction from people who
    know a lot more than I do. Keep in mind, I’m just starting this journey, so please
    tear this apart if it’s necessary. This is a long-term undertaking of
    experimentation.

    Here’s kind of where my research has led me:

    Water: ~70%

    Sodium Laurel Sarcosinate: ~10%

    Coco Betaine: ~10%

    Sodium Cocoyl Isethionate: ~3%

    Glyceryl Cocoate: ~2%

    PEG-8 Dimethicone: ~3%

    Hydroxypropyl Methylcellulose: ~1%

    DMDM Hydantoin: ~0.3% (I also plan to experiment
    with Germaben-II)

    Trisodium Ethylenediamene Disuccinate: ~0.2%

    Fragrance

     

    Do you see any red flags here? Any ingredients that aren’t going
    to play well with each other or an obvious gap?

    I’m going to experiment, but what is the best step-by-step
    to create the product with these ingredients?

    My current plan of attack was to combine the water and
    liquid surfactants and heat them up in short bursts in the microwave, primarily
    because I need to dissolve the sodium cocoyl isethionate somehow. I use SCI in
    some of my more complex soaps (it’s a great ingredient), but it’s a pain in the
    you-know-what to work with, specifically in hot process soap. It doesn’t really
    melt, which is a huge pain in high-stearic HP soaps, and its pH is slightly acidic,
    which, again, is a problem in self-preserving products like soaps. Not only
    that, but it can neutralize the lye and prevent proper saponification if not
    used correctly. Anyway, what’s the best way to incorporate SCI in a shampoo? I’ve
    found virtually no literature on this.

    I was then going to add the silicone (careful to cool down
    the mixture beforehand) followed by the preservative, chelator, and fragrance (I
    read PEG-8 Dimethicone has emulsifying properties and I’m wondering if it alone
    will be enough to emulsify fragrance oils? Do I need a separate emulsifier?).

    Lastly, incorporate the cellulose thickener.

    To be clear, I have no idea if this is anywhere close to the
    right process. I generally learn by failing
    enough times until things work out (:

    Thanks so much in advance, all.

    ngarayeva001 replied 5 years, 4 months ago 2 Members · 3 Replies
  • 3 Replies
  • ngarayeva001

    Member
    November 27, 2018 at 10:26 am

    Hi @glachney

    I thought I am the only full-time financial advisor who obsessively
    formulates on weekends on this forum. So, not a chemist either and not
    particularly familiar with Sodium
    Laurel Sarcosinate, but I can comment on some other points.

    PEG-8
    Dimethicone is great and you should definitely keep it. It does have some emulsifying
    properties (as many other PEGs) but not enough to solubilize fragrance. The best
    solubilizer for this purpose is PEG-40 Hydrogenated Castor Oil. I like it much better
    than Polysorbates. Alternatively, use Polysorbate 80.

    Tetrasodium EDTA
    is better when you want to get a clear product. Also, there is no need to add
    it in the end as far as I know.

    The last one,
    those sulphates elevate pH. Make sure you add citric acid in the end to
    bring the pH down to 5-6.

  • glachney

    Member
    November 27, 2018 at 9:45 pm

    @ngarayeva001 you’re a rockstar, thanks! Kindred spirits we are. It’s really fun finding hobbies so far out of your area of exposure that the only option is to start researching like a mad man. 

    I’ll definitely check out PEG-40 Hydrogenated Castor Oil and also be sure to keep an eye on pH. Thank you for that feedback. What’s the practical reason for shampoo needing to be on the acidic side? Shampoo bars for example are up near 9-10+, right? 

    Where did you learn some of the foundational stuff? Like understanding Chemistry 101. I somehow made it through my whole schooling career without a single Chem course, so I often find myself researching something and easily getting tripped up in the nomenclature and explanations. 

  • ngarayeva001

    Member
    November 27, 2018 at 10:10 pm

    @glachney, ideally all skin and hair product should have pH below 7, since our skin has a pH between 4.5-5.5 and hair even less (btw hair conditioners should be below 5 to work). My understanding is that all products with pH >9 are in that range not because it’s good for skin/hair but because there is no way to reduce pH of that particular product. 

    I had no understanding of chemistry when I started formulating. I was changing firms and had a couple of months lag between jobs. And I thought that taking a $350 moisturizer, reading it’s endless LOI and attempting to recreate it was a good idea :smiley:  And then I ended up with 28 ingredients from makingcosmetics and no idea how to mix them.
    Jokes aside, it’s trial and error. I analyze LOIs of commercial products a lot. Beautypedia.com is a place where you can search for products by type and brand and lookup LOIs. I recently found swiftcraftymonkey blog (paid subscription). There is a lot of good information there. And this forum is absolutely amazing. 

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