What is activated charcoal?
Activated charcoal is charcoal of plant origin, usually coconut, bamboo, or wood, subjected to an activation process at high temperatures with steam or CO2. This process creates an extraordinarily porous internal structure, with a huge contact surface in a very small volume. One gram of activated charcoal can have an internal surface area equivalent to several football fields.
In cosmetics, it appears as a fine black powder, Charcoal Powder, or in granular activated form, Activated Charcoal. Same ingredient, different processing method. Its purifying properties are the same in both cases.
How it works on skin and in the mouth
Activated charcoal does not absorb, it adsorbs: it retains impurities, sebum, bacteria, and toxins on its surface through physical attraction. Similar to clays, but with a much greater surface capacity.
In facial cleansers, the contact time is brief but sufficient to remove impurities and excess sebum. In toothpastes, it acts as a mild abrasive that removes superficial stains from enamel and adsorbs bacteria and compounds responsible for bad breath.
It does not penetrate the skin or tooth enamel. It works on the surface and washes away with rinsing. No residue, no build-up.
Properties and benefits
- Potent purifier, adsorbs impurities, sebum, and bacteria
- Superficial detoxifier, ideal for acne-prone skin
- Mild antibacterial due to bacteria adsorption
- Very mild dental abrasive, removes superficial enamel stains
- Improves breath by adsorbing volatile compounds
- Non-comedogenic, works on the surface without clogging pores
- Compatible with combination, oily, and acne-prone skin
Use and integration into routine
In solid cleansers and syndets, it appears in low concentrations, sufficient for purifying action without drying. It is not for daily use on sensitive or dry skin; for these, there are milder options like kaolin. For combination or oily, acne-prone skin, a cleanser with activated charcoal two or three times a week is more than enough.
In natural toothpastes, it complements the remineralizing action of other active ingredients like hydroxyapatite, providing cleaning and superficial whitening without harsh abrasives.
Curiosities and facts
An infinite surface in a grain of dust
The activation of charcoal creates millions of micropores in each particle. A single gram can have between 500 and 1,500 m² of active internal surface area. That is the reason for its effectiveness: it is not chemistry, it is pure geometry.
From emergency medicine to cosmetics
Activated charcoal has been used for decades in emergency medicine as a treatment for oral intoxications, adsorbing toxins in the digestive tract before they are absorbed. In cosmetics, the principle is the same, but the application is topical and superficial. Two very different uses of the same mechanism.
The black that cleans
The color black generates mistrust in cosmetics, where white and transparent are associated with purity. Activated charcoal reverses this logic: the darker, the more porous, the more active. The black cleansers and pastes that contain it work precisely because of this color, not despite it.
Ancient history, modern ingredient
Egyptians, Phoenicians, Greeks, and Romans already used vegetable charcoal ash to make soap. What we sell today as a cosmetic trend has millennia of empirical use. Industrial activation arrived in 1901, when the Russian researcher R. Von Ostrejko patented the first production methods. Before that, it worked just the same, only no one knew why.
This is how it appears in the INCI: Charcoal Powder, Activated Charcoal
Other active ingredients you might be interested in
Clays: complementary mineral purification, milder than activated charcoal and suitable for more frequent use.
Hydroxyapatite: dental mineral that remineralizes enamel, an ideal complement to activated charcoal in natural toothpastes.
Niacinamide: to complete the purifying routine with action on pores, sebum, and uneven tone.
Lactic Acid: gentle chemical exfoliation that complements the deep cleansing of activated charcoal in routines for combination or acne-prone skin.