Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate
A cosmetic ingredient used as hair conditioning, skin conditioning, skin conditioning - emollient in skincare, haircare, and personal-care products sold in the European Union.
What is it?
Dimethicone PEG-8 Phosphate is the partial ester of phosphoric acid and Dimethicone containing an average of 8 moles of ethylene oxide
What does it do?
Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate is listed in the EU cosmetic ingredient inventory with the following declared functions:
-
Hair conditioning
improves the appearance, feel, and manageability of hair
-
Skin conditioning
improves the appearance, feel, and condition of skin
-
Skin conditioning - emollient
softens the skin by reducing roughness and friction between skin cells
-
Surfactant - cleansing
surfactant whose primary cosmetic role is cleansing — the active workhorse in soaps, shampoos, and body washes
-
Surfactant - foam boosting
surfactant that increases the volume or stability of foam produced by other surfactants in the same formulation
EU regulatory status
Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate is allowed for use in cosmetic products in the European Union under Regulation 1223/2009. It is not subject to a specific Annex restriction at the time of writing.
Frequently asked questions
What is Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate?
Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate is a cosmetic ingredient catalogued in the EU CosIng database. Dimethicone PEG-8 Phosphate is the partial ester of phosphoric acid and Dimethicone containing an average of 8 moles of ethylene oxide
Is Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate allowed in cosmetics in the EU?
Yes. Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate is allowed for use in cosmetic products in the EU under Regulation 1223/2009.
What does Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate do in cosmetic products?
Dimethicone Peg-8 Phosphate is declared in the EU cosmetic ingredient inventory with these functions: hair conditioning, skin conditioning, skin conditioning - emollient, surfactant - cleansing, surfactant - foam boosting.
Related ingredients
Source: EU CosIng database (European Commission). This page is derived from public-sector information published by the European Commission. · Last updated: 15/10/2010