Alumina

Aceptable

Absorbente

Alumina at a glance

  • Naturally occurring mineral also called aluminum oxide
  • Used as an abrasive, thickener, and absorbent in cosmetics
  • Also functions as a coating agent for some powders, such as titanium dioxide
  • Determined safe as used in cosmetics and medications
  • The primary component of rubies, emeralds, and sapphires

Alumina description

Alumina is the common name of the ingredient aluminum oxide. It is a naturally occurring mineral used as an abrasive, a thickener, and an absorbent in cosmetics. Alumina is sometimes used as part a coating blend for nano-sized mineral UV filters such as titanium dioxide. This coating keeps the very fine power particles of the mineral sunscreen on skin’s surface since the coating materials are a larger molecular size. These coating blends also improve the aesthetics and even application of mineral sunscreen ingredients. In skin care preparations, alumina is used in amounts up to 25%. It’s been determined safe as used in cosmetics by the independent Cosmetic Ingredient Review panel. It is also approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a colour additive for use in certain over-the-counter drugs. Alumina in its natural form is a white solid. It is the third hardest naturally occurring substance, and is the primary component of rubies, emeralds, and sapphires (their colour is determined by small impurities found in heavy metals).

Alumina references

  • International Journal of Toxicology, November 2016, pages 16S-33S
  • Journal of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, February 2015, pages 1,636-1,646
  • https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfcfr/CFRSearch.cfm?fr=73.1010&SearchTerm=alumina%C2%A0

Peer-reviewed, substantiated scientific research is used to assess ingredients in this dictionary. Regulations regarding constraints, permitted concentration levels and availability vary by country and region.

Calificaciones de ingredientes

Excelente

Ingrediente sobresaliente con beneficios reales para la piel. Su eficacia está demostrada y respaldada por estudios independientes.

Bueno

Aunque no son tan beneficiosos como los de la categoría excelente, suelen ser necesarios para mejorar la textura, la estabilidad o la absorción de una fórmula.

Aceptable

Puede presentar ciertas limitaciones en cuanto a su apariencia, estabilidad o eficacia. A veces, son ingredientes básicos o que no cuentan con suficiente respaldo científico.

Poco recomendable

Aunque puede ofrecer algunos beneficios se recomienda evitarlo por su probabilidad de causar irritación, especialmente si se combina con otros ingredientes problemáticos.

Desaconsejable

Ha demostrado provocar efectos adversos como irritación, inflamación o sequedad, especialmente si se utiliza en altas concentraciones o junto con otros ingredientes irritantes.

Desconocido

No hemos encontrado este ingrediente en nuestro diccionario. Registramos todos los ingredientes desconocidos y actualizamos la información de forma continua.

Sin calificar

Ingrediente registrado, pero con la información científica disponible pendiente de revisar.