Surfactants are classified by their ionic character — whether they carry a positive charge, negative charge, both, or no charge at all in water. This classification affects how a surfactant behaves in a formula, how it interacts with other ingredients, and how safe it is for use.
Polyethylene Glycol Oleate (PEG Oleate) appears widely across cosmetic, pharmaceutical, and industrial products. A common question is whether it belongs to the non-ionic category. The answer is yes — and understanding why starts with its chemical structure.
PEG Oleate is made by combining two molecules: polyethylene glycol (PEG) and oleic acid.
Polyethylene glycol is a water-loving polymer built from repeating ethylene oxide units (-CH₂CH₂O-). It comes in different chain lengths — PEG-200, PEG-400, PEG-600 — where the number reflects molecular weight. Longer chains mean greater water solubility.
Oleic acid is an 18-carbon fatty acid with one double bond, naturally found in olive oil. It is oil-loving and forms the hydrophobic tail of the molecule.
When the two react through esterification, an ester bond (-COO-) forms between them. The result is a molecule with an oily tail on one end and a water-friendly PEG chain on the other — a classic surfactant structure. Crucially, no ions are produced during this reaction, and the ester bond carries no electrical charge.
A surfactant is non-ionic when it carries no electrical charge in water. PEG Oleate meets this definition for two straightforward reasons:
A useful comparison: sodium oleate (soap) is made by reacting oleic acid with sodium hydroxide, producing a carboxylate salt that ionizes in water. PEG Oleate uses the same fatty acid but is made through esterification instead, which produces no salt and no ions.
PEG Oleate also has an HLB value (Hydrophilic-Lipophilic Balance) typically between 8 and 15, depending on PEG chain length. This range is associated almost exclusively with non-ionic emulsifiers, further confirming its classification.
The non-ionic character of PEG Oleate can be confirmed through several basic tests:
Ionic surfactants release charged particles that increase electrical conductivity. A PEG Oleate solution shows very low conductivity, close to that of pure water, indicating no significant ion release.
Emulsions made with PEG Oleate show zeta potential values near zero, consistent with a neutral emulsifier — unlike ionic surfactants which show high positive or negative values.
Anionic and cationic surfactants react strongly with each other, often causing precipitation. PEG Oleate mixes freely with both types without losing performance.
PEG Oleate has no ionizable group, so its performance stays consistent across a wide pH range — unlike soap-type surfactants that change behavior significantly with pH.
The non-ionic nature of PEG Oleate translates directly into practical benefits:
Without a charge, PEG Oleate is unaffected by dissolved salts or electrolytes in a formula — a common problem for ionic surfactants.
Its performance does not depend on ionization, so it works reliably in acidic, neutral, or mildly alkaline products without adjustment.
Non-ionic surfactants generally cause less irritation than ionic types because they do not interact with skin proteins and lipids through electrostatic forces.
PEG Oleate can be combined with anionic, cationic, or other non-ionic ingredients without compatibility issues, giving formulators significant flexibility.
These properties make PEG Oleate a practical choice across cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, food processing, and industrial applications.