
Both PEG Laurate and PEG Oleate are nonionic surfactants produced by esterifying polyethylene glycol (PEG) with different fatty acids — but their origins set them apart from the start.
The key structural distinction — chain length and degree of saturation — is what drives all downstream differences in performance and application.
Understanding their structural differences helps predict how each behaves in a formulation:
| Property | PEG Laurate (C12) | PEG Oleate (C18) |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon chain | C12 · Shorter | C18 · Longer |
| Saturation | Saturated | Monounsaturated |
| HLB value | Higher (more hydrophilic) | Lower (more lipophilic) |
| Oxidative stability | High · Long shelf life | Lower · More prone to oxidation |
| Skin feel | Light, clean | Rich, moisturizing |
| Skin penetration | Lower | Higher (closer to skin lipids) |
Lauric acid's fully saturated C12 chain makes PEG Laurate chemically more stable — ideal for formulas requiring a long shelf life. Oleic acid's double bond, while giving PEG Oleate superior skin affinity and penetration, also makes it more susceptible to oxidative degradation over time.
The practical choice between PEG Laurate and PEG Oleate depends on the specific demands of your formulation:
Ultimately, the right choice is guided by four key variables: carbon chain length, degree of saturation, target HLB value, and end-use application scenario. Mapping your formulation requirements against these factors will consistently point to the optimal choice.