Cetyl Alcohol


In the past I am sure you might have tried some fancy, crazy stuff with your hair in order to get the 'desired look'! Picking up a shampoo or a conditioner's bottle in a store and reading the back label to check the ingredients content is our usual behavior when it comes to hair care but an essential one though. Well what if I tell you besides normal ingredients how about you trying an alcohol bath. I mean to say, many people use alcohols in their hair while running a bath to maintain a smooth quality. Alcohols dries the texture of your hair. But not all! Fatty alcohols like cetyl alcohol and stearyl alcohol are readily found in conditioners and shampoos these days to help keep your hair hydrated.

Properties

  • It is a fatty alcohol which means it's originated from the oils or fats of a substance. Oils usually help in the polishing any surface or material and also reduce the surface tension of a fluid. This alcohol is widely used in a host of cosmetics, skin products and hair oils due to its chemical properties which benefits the hair.
  • Now because of such qualities used in shampoos and conditioners, hair gains all the softness and shine from the extracting chemicals.
  • The fatty alcohols are tentatively larger molecules by nature and have more than sufficient measure of oil extracts in them.
  • Usually fats like oils do not blend with water at all, hence it gets a reason to act as a barrier for loss of water. Experimenting this alcohol sometime ahead, might make you realize why your scalp and hair doesn't turn all dry and chip flakes of skin popularly called 'dandruff.'
  • The derivation of this alcohol chains straight from biome plants and animals present in nature. Thus its name is caught up from the animal whale oil from which it was for the first time isolated.
  • It is cited as an emollient and also as a secondary emulsifier due to the softening properties it possesses. In a lotion, it simply adds volume and body to the products.
  • Therefore this substance suits best in the domain of nails, hair and or any other skin care products.
  • The toxicity according to the research is quite minimal. Since it's not an 'actual-type' of alcohol like the ethyl alcohol', the properties it disposes is yellowish white flakes with zero smell and toxicity.
  • Back in the early 18th century the invention of this product was undertaken by a French scientist who used a waxy content which was extracted from the sperm of whale oil and was mixed with potassium hydroxide. Furthermore the dags were left behind for a cooling process.
  • Over the years with implementations of environmental witting norms, commercial whaling has barricaded. Thus no longer cetyl alcohol is developed from whale oil. Instead now it is produced from ordinary coconut or vegetable oils.
Uses
  • Well as mentioned earlier, it's used in cosmetic industries as a chemical agent in hair products.
  • It is a naturally derived intoxicant that caters the softness and creaminess of a substance in the domain of hair products.
  • The ease you experience while combing your hair after a bath is due to the conditioner effect while washing your hair.
  • Thus cetyl alcohol has a lubrication which sends flavors of moisture, richness, softness and all the goody-goodies you ask for.
  • Apart from providing lubrication in skin creams and hand lotions, the same is employed in industrial used to smoothen nuts, pins and bolts of machines.
Sometimes in certain cases, it's seen that this product is not used because it causes an adverse effect on skin and hair for some people. Although it features all the good stuff as a chemical element, scientifically its proven that the thickening agents massively increases the viscosity of the lubricant. In turn such dense applications imbalances the resulting conditions after usage.

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