Why Won't My Cleanser Thicken?
Salt thickening, why it fails, and what to use instead
Adding salt to thicken a surfactant formula is a classic technique, but it only works if your surfactant blend is responsive. When it fails, no amount of salt will help. This guide explains why.
How Salt Thickening Works
Surfactants organize into micelles. Electrolytes (salt) change these from spherical to worm-like structures that entangle, increasing viscosity.
Critical Requirement
When Salt Thickening Fails
Non-anionic Primary Surfactant
Low ASM Concentration
Passed the Peak
Structure Disruption
Responsive Blends
- SLES + CAPB (3:1 ratio): The gold standard for thickening.
- SLS + CAPB: Similar high response, though harsher on skin.
- Sodium Lauroyl Sarcosinate: Moderate salt response, very gentle.
BubbleMath Tip
Polymer Thickeners
Use these for sulfate-free or glucoside-based cleansers:
- Crothix: Specifically designed for surfactants. Easy to use at 1-3%.
- HEC (Hydroxyethylcellulose): Add to water phase first. Gives non-tacky gels.
- Carbomer: Requires pH neutralization. Sensitive to electrolytes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Check thickening viability in BubbleMath
BubbleMath predicts whether your blend will thicken with salt before you start mixing.
