Glycols & Polyols Available — Bulk Only

PEG-7 Glyceryl Cocoate

CAS 68201-46-7

A coconut-derived PEG glyceryl ester valued for mild surfactancy and emollient feel in cleansers. It is used as a mild surfactant, emollient and refatting agent in cosmetic, personal-care and cleansing formulations.

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HS Code
3402.42
At a Glance
Material Family
Glycols & Polyols
Record Type
Pure compound
Primary Role
Cleaning / Degreasing · Surfactancy
Functional Roles
PEG-7 GLYCERYL COCOATE
SURFACTANT - CLEANSINGSURFACTANT - EMULSIFYING
Industries Served
Applications & Use Cases
  • Mild surfactant: surface-active agent in cleansing systems
  • Emollient: emollient and skin-conditioning component
  • Refatting: helps offset the defatting effect of cleansing surfactants
Safety & Handling
Full SDS available on request

A grade-specific Safety Data Sheet (SDS) — with the complete hazard classification, handling precautions, and transport information — is supplied with every shipment and available on request. Confirm all safety and regulatory details against the SDS for your specific grade.

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HS / Tariff Classification
Harmonized System (HS) Code — 6-digit international heading
3402 . 42
Chapter 34
Soap, organic surface-active agents, washing and lubricating preparations, waxes
Heading 34.02
Internationally harmonized (WCO HS)
Subheading 3402.42
6-digit international code — national tariff line adds further digits
Chemical Identity
CAS Number
68201-46-7
INCI Name
PEG-7 GLYCERYL COCOATE
Synonyms & Trade Names
GLYCERYL COCOATE PEG cocate PEG80 GLYCERYL COCOATE Polyethylene glycol glyceryl cocoate PPG-11 Stearyl Ether PEG-30 Glyceryl Cocoate PEG-120 METHYL GLUCOSE DIOLEATE
Full Description

PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate (CAS 68201-46-7) is a nonionic surfactant, the PEG (7 EO) glyceryl ester of coconut fatty acids. It is used as a mild surfactant, emollient and refatting agent in cosmetic, personal-care and cleansing formulations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate?

PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate (CAS 68201-46-7) is a nonionic surfactant — the PEG (7 EO) glyceryl ester of coconut fatty acids. It is used as a mild surfactant, emollient and refatting agent in cosmetic, personal-care and cleansing formulations.

Is PEG a silicone?

No. PEG (polyethylene glycol) is a polyether, not a silicone; silicones are siloxane (Si-O) polymers. PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate is a PEG/coconut-fatty-acid glyceryl ester (CAS 68201-46-7) and contains no silicone.

Is PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate an alcohol?

No. It is a glyceryl ester of coconut fatty acids ethoxylated with about 7 EO, classified as a nonionic surfactant, not an alcohol. Its INCI name is PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate.

What is PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate used for?

It is used as a mild surface-active agent in cleansing systems, as an emollient and skin-conditioning component, and as a refatting agent that helps offset the defatting effect of stronger cleansing surfactants.

What is the cost of bulk PEG-7 glyceryl cocoate?

Bulk pricing depends on volume, packaging and destination. Request a quote from RawSource with your target quantity and ship-to location for current landed pricing on drum or tote quantities (CAS 68201-46-7, HS 3402.42).

Disclaimer. Information on this page — including properties, identifiers, hazard, transport (DOT/UN) and tariff (HS) classifications, and applications — is provided for general reference and is compiled from authoritative public sources (e.g. PubChem/ECHA, 49 CFR 172.101, the Harmonized Tariff Schedule). Values are typical and are not a guaranteed specification; the Certificate of Analysis (CoA) for the lot purchased governs. Products are sold for industrial and professional use only. Nothing here is a medical, health, or efficacy claim or advice. Always consult the current Safety Data Sheet (SDS) before handling, storage, transport or disposal, and confirm regulatory status, classification and suitability for your application and jurisdiction. Hazard, transport and tariff classifications must be verified for your specific shipment. RawSource makes no warranty, express or implied, and assumes no liability for use of this information. Trademarks. Third-party trademarks and brand names are the property of their respective owners; any reference is nominative — used only to identify a comparable product — and does not imply affiliation with, sponsorship by, or endorsement by the trademark owner.