Aluminum/magnesium hydroxide stearate: properties, uses, pros, cons, safety
Aluminum/magnesium hydroxide stearate is a complex metal soap derived from the interaction between stearic acid and aluminum and magnesium hydroxide species. In cosmetics it is used mainly as an emulsion stabilizer and viscosity controller, with a practical role as a structuring thickener and, in some systems, as a suspending agent for oily phases and dispersions.

Definition
The name refers to a stearate-based material associated with aluminum and magnesium hydroxide fractions. From a formulator’s standpoint it behaves as a lipophilic (or mixed-compatibility) rheology modifier (depending on grade and carrier), able to increase consistency, improve physical stability, and contribute to texture (slip/body, reduced “bleeding” in certain systems).
Production process and key constituents
How it is produced (in brief)
Typical industrial manufacturing involves reaction/complexation between stearic acid (or related stearate salts/derivatives) and aluminum and magnesium sources in hydroxide form, controlling: stearate/metal ratio, temperature profile, neutralization, removal of residues, and particle-size/dispersibility standardization. Many commercial grades are supplied as pre-dispersions in a carrier (e.g., cosmetic oils or volatile solvents) to facilitate use as a gel former/thickener.
Key constituents (representative, by category)
“Stearate” fraction
Stearic acid (residual/bound)
Aluminum stearate (functional fraction)
Magnesium stearate (functional fraction)
“Hydroxide/oxide” fraction
Technical note. Actual composition can vary with stoichiometry (metal-to-stearate ratios), hydration/moisture, and commercial form (powder vs pre-dispersion). For formulation performance, the key parameters are typically: gel strength, fineness, and rheological repeatability.
Main uses
Cosmetics
Typical use in:
O/W or W/O emulsions to support stability and body of the oil phase
anhydrous or oil-rich systems as a thickener/structurant (e.g., oil gels, balms)
pigment dispersions, where it can improve suspension and application uniformity
make-up and sunscreens where a firmer, less runny texture is desired (matrix-dependent)
INCI functions
Emulsion stabilizer. Emulsions are thermodynamically unstable. Emulsion stabilisers improve the formation and stability of single and double emulsions. It should be noted that in the structure-function relationship, molar mass plays an important role.
Surfactant - Suspending agent. Cosmetic or pharmaceutical suspensions are known to be thermodynamically unstable and it is therefore essential to include in the formulation a suspending agent capable of dispersing any sedimented particulates and reducing the rate of sedimentation. The presence of this agent increases the consistency of the suspension medium and exerts a protective colloidal action with a surfactant action.
Industrial use
A rheology additive for cosmetic bases and for pre-gels/dispersions in oily or volatile carriers, useful for process standardization and sensorial repeatability.
Identification data and specifications
| Characteristic | Value | Note |
|---|
| INCI name | Aluminum/magnesium hydroxide stearate | Cosmetic denomination |
| Technical synonyms | Al/Mg stearate-based metal soap | Usage terminology |
| Origin | synthetic or mixed (grade-dependent) | Supplier-dependent |
| CAS number | not uniquely reported in major public databases | Often listed without CAS |
| EC number (EINECS) | not uniquely reported in major public databases | Often listed without EC |
| Empirical formula (indicative) | C18H36AlMgO3 | Reported in some technical sheets; stoichiometry-dependent |
| Molecular weight (indicative) | 351.76 g/mol | Linked to the indicative empirical formula |
| Main function | emulsion stabilizer, viscosity control | INCI framing |
| Variability note | medium–high | Depends on Al/Mg ratio, carrier, and process |
Chemical-physical properties (indicative)
| Characteristic | Indicative value | Note |
|---|
| Physical state | powder or pre-dispersion | Depends on commercial grade |
| Color | white / off-white | Varies with purity and carrier |
| Odor | neutral | Often barely perceptible as a powder |
| Water solubility | very low | Typical metal soap behavior |
| Solubility in oils | not “soluble” but dispersible/gel-forming | Builds rheological structures in some oils |
| Rheological effect | thickening/structuring | Depends on shear, temperature, oil polarity |
| Stability | good | Mainly sensitive to process and dispersion quality |
| Key issues | lumps, non-repeatable rheology | Linked to wetting and incorporation method |
Functional role and mechanism of action
It acts as a rheology modifier: stearate units and particle–particle interactions can create a structuring network in the oil phase or in dispersion, increasing viscosity and reducing oil-phase mobility. In emulsions it contributes to physical stability by improving resistance to separation and supporting microstructure, especially when combined with other structurants (waxes, lipophilic polymers, silicas).
Formulation compatibility
Generally compatible with:
oil phases (esters, triglycerides, vegetable/mineral oils) where it can build structure
pigment-containing systems (if properly predispersed)
emulsions with an adequate oil phase and controlled processing
Key checkpoints:
sensitivity to addition order and shear (lump risk)
rheology changes with temperature and oil polarity
compatibility with volatile solvents (some grades are designed for silicone/volatiles)
sensorial impact (drag/waxy feel if overdosed)
Pros and cons
Pros
improves body and physical stability across multiple systems
useful to structure oil gels and reduce runniness
can support suspension of particulates and pigments
Cons
behavior strongly process- and matrix-dependent (variability risk)
dispersion handling can be challenging at scale (wetting, lumping)
may increase opacity and sensorial “weight” if not balanced
Safety, regulatory, and environmental aspects
Aluminium can interfere with different biological processes (cellular oxidative stress, calcium metabolism, etc.), so it can induce toxic effects in different organs and systems, and the nervous system is the main target of its toxicity. Monitoring potential cumulative intake is always necessary.
Allergen.
Not a typical fragrance allergen. Skin tolerability is generally good at normal use levels, but as with many powders/particulates it is advisable to avoid inhalation exposure during handling of bulk powders.
Contraindications (brief).
Use caution in products for particularly sensitive areas if the system is heavily loaded or abrasive due to particulates; assessment should be performed on the finished product.
Regulatory note.
The presence of aluminum can be relevant for brands monitoring overall aluminum exposure in certain categories (e.g., leave-on). In such cases it is useful to request supplier data on metal content and purity.
Environment.
Like many metal stearates, the biodegradability of this inorganic–organic material is not high; practical impact depends on use levels and management of process effluents.
Formulation troubleshooting
Lumps or non-uniform dispersion.
Action: predisperse into part of the oil phase under controlled shear, respect the temperature window, and use compatible wetting/solubilizing aids if needed.
Rheology too high or “draggy” sensorial feel.
Action: reduce dosage, adjust oil polarity, combine with emollients that improve slip.
Phase separation over time in emulsions.
Action: rebalance the emulsifier system and oil phase, verify network structuring with co-thickeners, optimize processing (time/shear/cooling profile).
Conclusion
Aluminum/magnesium hydroxide stearate is a functional ingredient used as an emulsion stabilizer and viscosity controller, with a practical role in structuring the oil phase and supporting physical stability. Performance is strongly linked to commercial grade, carrier, and incorporation method; process standardization and incoming-lot verification are key to achieving repeatability.