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Polysilicone-10
"Descrizione"
by admin (19538 pt)
2026-Feb-04 19:22

Polysilicone-10: properties, uses, pros, cons, safety, alternatives

Polysilicone-10 is a functionalized silicone polymer whose extended description is “Polydimethylsiloxane, methyltrimethylsilyloxy-3-hydroxypropoxysilyl terminated, ethoxylated, diester with perfluoroalkyl hydrogen dilinoleate”. In practical terms, it is a modified silicone designed to provide hair conditioning and an anti-foaming effect in specific formulation bases, with a sensory profile typically oriented toward slip, combability, and foam control during manufacturing and/or consumer use.


Definition

It is not a single “simple” molecule: it is a polymeric siloxane-based structure (a PDMS-type backbone) with ethoxylated segments and a diester moiety linked to a perfluoroalkyl-containing hydrogenated dilinoleate fraction. This architecture tends to increase compatibility with certain oily phases and to improve slip and distribution on the hair fiber, while retaining typical silicone properties (chemical stability and low surface tension).

The term ethoxylated in the name indicates that the molecule contains ethoxylated segments (units derived from ethylene oxide, EO) introduced into the polymeric structure.


Main uses

Cosmetics
It is used mainly in haircare products where noticeable conditioning and foam management are required: conditioners and masks, lightweight leave-ons, selected styling products, and in some cleansing bases where technical foam control is desired (for example, to improve processability in manufacturing or to limit excessive foaming during use). The most sought-after outcome is a combination of softness, shine, and reduced combing friction, with a deposition that may feel more “silky” than silicone-free systems.

INCI functions

Antifoaming agent. The constituent factors for foam stabilisation are the concentration of nanoparticles and hydrophobicity. Foam, even when used in separation operations such as fractionation or flotation, can cause a decrease in density and a deterioration in quality in cosmetic products. The defoaming agent (non-polar oil, silicone oils, hydrophobic solid particles or mixtures of both) is strongly influenced by viscosity and, to an almost directly proportional extent, concentration. However, defoamers can carry an irreversible source of contamination.

Hair conditioning agent. A large number of ingredients with specific purposes can co-exist in a hair shampoo: cleansers, conditioners, thickeners, mattifying agents, sequestering agents, fragrances, preservatives, special additives. However, the indispensable ingredients are the cleansers and conditioners as they are necessary and sufficient for hair cleansing and manageability. The others act as commercial and non-essential auxiliaries such as: appearance, fragrance, colouring, etc. Hair conditioning agents have the task of increasing shine, manageability and volume, and reducing static electricity, especially after treatments such as colouring, ironing, waving, drying and brushing. They are, in practice, dispersing agents that may contain cationic surfactants, thickeners, emollients, polymers. The typology of hair conditioners includes: intensive conditioners, instant conditioners, thickening conditioners, drying conditioners.

Industrial use
Beyond cosmetics, functionalized siloxane polymers are sometimes used as process additives to modulate surface tension, wetting, and foaming phenomena in compatible systems, depending on the commercial grade and matrix compatibility.


Identification data and specifications

CharacteristicValueNote
INCI namePolysilicone-10Cosmetic denomination
Chemical naturefunctionalized siloxane polymerModified silicone
OriginsyntheticMan-made polymer
CAS numbernot unique / not reported in some EU cosmetic databasesA single CAS may be absent depending on classification
EC number (EINECS)not unique / not reported in some EU cosmetic databasesDepends on how the material is registered/classified
Molecular formulanot applicable (polymer)Polymeric structure
Molecular weightnot applicable (polymer)Distribution, not a single value
Functionsantifoaming; hair conditioningINCI functions


Chemical-physical properties (indicative)

CharacteristicIndicative valueNote
Physical stateviscous liquid or dense fluidDepends on polymerization degree and carrier
Colorcolorless to pale yellowBatch-dependent
Odormild / characteristicUsually not dominant in the finished product
Water solubilityvery low / insolubleTypical of silicones
Solubility in solvents/oilsvariable, often good in suitable systemsDepends on ethoxylation and oil phase
Surface tensionlowContributes to slip and wetting
Stabilityhigh at cosmetic pH and moderate temperaturesMore sensitive to phase compatibility than rapid degradation

Functional role and mechanism of action

On hair, Polysilicone-10 tends to form a low-surface-energy deposit that reduces friction between fibers, improving combability and a silky feel. The siloxane portion contributes to slip and shine, while the functionalization (ethoxylation and diester moiety) can improve distribution and integration in certain formulation matrices.

As an antifoaming agent, it mainly reduces the stability of foam lamellae and promotes bubble coalescence, providing a technical benefit especially during processing or in products where excessive foam is undesirable.


Formulation compatibility

Performance depends strongly on the system: in emulsions and oily mixtures it can be easier to manage; in aqueous or surfactant-based systems it may require solubilization or pre-dispersion strategies to avoid separation, haze, or instability. In haircare, the balance between deposition, “weight,” and build-up depends on use level, surfactant type (if present), presence of cationic/film-forming polymers, and rinse-off profile.


Pros and cons

Pros
Improves slip, softness, and shine of hair, often with an immediate effect.
Can reduce friction and therefore the perception of “rough hair” after washing or styling.
Useful as a technical antifoam in bases where foaming creates process or use issues.

Cons
Risk of build-up and a “weighed-down” feel on fine hair or in unbalanced formulas, requiring optimization of dosage and cleansing system.
Non-universal compatibility: in some bases it can cause haze, separation, or viscosity loss if not properly carried/solubilized.
Presence of a perfluoroalkyl portion: can increase regulatory and supply-chain scrutiny (PFAS topic), requiring tighter controls on compliance, traceability, and supplier declarations.


Safety, regulatory, and environmental aspects

From a general toxicological standpoint, silicones and polysiloxanes are often considered to have low skin absorption and favorable safety profiles at cosmetic use levels. Practical assessment should always be based on the finished product, the exposure route (sprays/aerosols require attention for incidental inhalation), and impurities/commercial forms.

Silicones have high chemical stability, but low biodegradability and a potentially high bioaccumulation concern depending on the specific structure and environmental fate profile.

Regulatory/claim attention: the presence of the perfluoroalkyl fragment is relevant if a “PFAS-free” policy applies or if compliance/positioning is being evaluated in markets with emerging PFAS restrictions. In these cases, it is advisable to verify precisely the structure, CAS, and the supplier’s documentation.

Allergen.
It is not typically a classic “fragrance allergen.” In very reactive skin, irritation is more often driven by the overall formula (surfactants, preservatives, fragrance) than by the silicone itself, but evaluation must remain focused on the finished product.

Contraindications (brief).
Use caution in spray/aerosol products if not properly engineered to reduce respiratory exposure. On fine hair, avoid high levels that may increase build-up.


Formulation troubleshooting

Haze or separation.
Review carrier, pre-mixing, and surfactant compatibility; evaluate an alternative grade or an appropriate solubilizer.

Hair feels weighed down.
Reduce dosage, balance with more effective rinse-off cleansing systems, or alternate with “clarifying” formulas.

Foam reduced too much (perceived as “less cleansing”).
Optimize antifoam level and positioning, distinguishing between process needs and consumer perception.

Alternatives

Option (INCI)Product typeKey advantages
Acrylates CopolymerSynthetic film former (water-resistant)Strong film formation and water resistance, useful in sunscreens and long-wear makeup; functional alternative when hold is needed.
VP/VA CopolymerSynthetic film formerImproves wear and adhesion, enhances rub resistance; commonly used in sprays and styling products.
PullulanNatural-origin film former (polysaccharide)Natural-origin option with a light film and smoothing/tightening effect, useful in skincare and makeup (more limited water resistance).
Hydroxypropyl Starch PhosphateStarch-derived polymer (rheology/film support)Improves texture and stability, can add silky feel and reduce tack; good bio-based positioning.
TrimethylsiloxysilicateSilicone film formerVery high wear and water/transfer resistance, highly effective in sunscreens and long-wear; an option if you want to reduce crosspolymers but keep silicone performance.

Conclusion

Polysilicone-10 is a functionalized silicone designed for two key outcomes: hair conditioning (slip, combability, shine) and antifoaming (foam control). It is especially useful when a “silky” sensory profile and technical foam management are required, but it demands attention to compatibility, build-up risk, and—given the perfluoroalkyl portion—supply-chain and compliance controls in a regulatory environment that is evolving.


Mini-glossary

PDMS. Polydimethylsiloxane, a typical silicone backbone that provides low surface tension and slip.

PFAS. A broad family of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances; the presence of perfluoroalkyl groups can trigger evaluation, reporting, or restriction requirements depending on the definition adopted.

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