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What’s your favorite Thickener for Shampoo?
Posted by Dustin on November 20, 2018 at 5:35 amI’ve made the same shampoo and increased the viscosity different ways and they all seem to work well. I was curious what other people’s favorites are and Why? Or any other tips for this formula are always welcome.
Sodium Chloride didn’t work out well most likely because the Coco-Betaine increases the sodium level already. To close to crashing the curve I think.
So, I tried Xanthan Gum, Cellulouse, Increasing Coco-Betaine, etc… All do the trick, how do I choose the best way lol?!Water 70%
Alpha Olefin 15% CocoB 5% SLSA 2% Coco Hydroxy 2%
Glycerine 2%
Amodimethicone 1%
Sodium Gluconate .2
Glycol Stearate 1%
Panthenol .5
Marketing Extracts and Oils .9% total.Thickener 1%
Bill_Toge replied 5 years, 12 months ago 8 Members · 20 Replies -
20 Replies
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If all do the same trick, and there is no performance issue nor stability issue, I’d go for the cheapest and easiest alternative for the manufacturing process.
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@em88 that is the million dollar question. we who are stuck in the boondoe’s have to be very creative in sourcing raws at affordable prices and everything for non sulfates are expensive and big MOQ’s. i sometimes wish @Perry would do a good webinar on just this topic
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@globalwidget that is 40 USD a kg and MOQ is 200kgs. Delivery is 6-8 weeks locally
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PEG-150 Distearate, Aculyns from Dow, Stearamidopropyldimethylamine, and so on.
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The celluosics work pretty well. HPMC and HEC. And Carbomer EDT 2020 is helpful too.
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Perry said:The celluosics work pretty well. HPMC and HEC. And Carbomer EDT 2020 is helpful too.
Got a sample of this a few days ago. Hope it is not very expensive.
sven said:@em88 that is the million dollar question. we who are stuck in the boondoe’s have to be very creative in sourcing raws at affordable prices and everything for non sulfates are expensive and big MOQ’s. i sometimes wish @Perry would do a good webinar on just this topicI guess everyone has this issue, especially with big companies of raw materials (excipients). They have big MOQs and high prices.
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Thanks everyone. For the record the xanthum test had sedimentation separation after 9 days.
Looks like I’ll stick to Perry’s suggestion and the cellulous. I use HEC and so far so good, although It’s a little annoying to work with. -
Fekher said:@em88 what are the incompatibilities with HEC ?
On page 14 you will find a list of substances that are not compatible with HEC.
https://www.lotioncrafter.com/reference/tech_data_natrosol_hec.pdf
I usually try to avoid HEC when formulating shampoos. -
in my experience high-viscosity grades of HPMC work exceptionally well, especially with sulphate-free shampoos ones
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