Oleoscience
Online ISSN : 2187-3461
Print ISSN : 1345-8949
ISSN-L : 1345-8949
Foamy Makeup Remover Comprises with a Bicontinuous Microemulsion
Kei WATANABE
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2024 Volume 24 Issue 7 Pages 299-304

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Abstract

It is known that the basic value of a makeup remover is its ability to remove makeup and deliver the resulting feeling of freshness. Additional consumer needs to heighten the product experience include putting no burden on the skin during removal, not dripping during use, being easy to wash off, and so on. It has been assumed that a foamy makeup remover would be a strong candidate to address these issues. However, a foam-type remover has been impossible to create previously since makeup contains a considerable amount of hydrophobic solids, such as hydrophobized powders, waxes, and film formers. These ingredients break up the foam by intruding into its membrane.
We have succeeded in hybridizing an anion/amphoteric surfactant mixture into a bicontinuous microemulsion (BME) phase, which is known to have an excellent ability to remove makeup. The solution forms dense foam by dispensing it from a pump foamer, achieving a highly effective foam-state makeup remover for the first time. Furthermore, we found an interesting phenomenon whereby makeup is spontaneously dissolved upon contact with the foam-state remover. This phenomenon is caused after moderate foam breaking upon contact with makeup, leading to a supply of surfactant molecules from the air/remover interface to the makeup/remover interface, followed by a flow of water, resulting in makeup removal.
By this novel function of foam, achieved by the foam-state BME phase, a novel makeup remover that fulfills all the consumer needs listed above was successfully developed.

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© 2024 Japan Oil Chemists' Society
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