Quick Comparison

Gluconolactone (PHA)Squalane
Typical ConcentrationConcentrations: 4-15%. Can often be used daily even by sensitive skin types. Apply morning or night. No sun sensitivity increase (unlike AHAs). pH range: 3.5-4.5.Can be used pure (100% squalane oil) or in formulations. Apply 2-3 drops after water-based products. Can be mixed with moisturizer. Safe for morning and night use. Non-comedogenic rating: 0-1 (very unlikely to clog pores).
ApplicationTopical (serum, toner, cream). Gentle enough for daily use on most skin types.Topical (oil, serum, cream ingredient). Apply as the last step of skincare (after water-based products) or mix into moisturizer.
Research Papers4 papers10 papers
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Mechanism of Action

Gluconolactone (PHA)

Gluconolactone hydrolyzes desmosomal proteins and glycosaminoglycan bonds between corneocytes in stratum corneum, promoting desquamation. Large molecular size (178 Da vs glycolic acid 76 Da) means slow, even penetration through lipid bilayer — no irritation-causing 'hot spots' of concentrated acid. Gentle, sustained exfoliation. Six hydroxyl groups per molecule make it a potent humectant, forming hydrogen bonds with water and drawing moisture into stratum corneum. Chelates iron and copper ions, reducing metal-catalyzed free radical formation. Has antioxidant properties. Unlike AHAs, does not increase UV sensitivity. Lactone ring hydrolyzes to gluconic acid at skin pH. Ideal for sensitive skin, rosacea, those intolerant of glycolic or salicylic acid.

Squalane

Squalane is the fully hydrogenated form of squalene—a C30 isoprenoid hydrocarbon. As a saturated branched-chain hydrocarbon, squalane forms a non-occlusive emollient film that fills intercellular lipid spaces and reduces transepidermal water loss (TEWL) by approximately 20-30%. Squalene comprises ~12% of human sebum (synthesized via mevalonate pathway); squalane's structural similarity confers high biocompatibility and minimal comedogenic potential. Hydrogenation of squalene's six double bonds eliminates oxidative susceptibility—squalene peroxidizes with UV exposure while squalane remains stable. Squalane penetrates the stratum corneum and may support barrier lipid organization. Plant-derived squalane (sugarcane, olive) is structurally identical.

Risks & Safety

Gluconolactone (PHA)

Common

Essentially none — one of the most tolerated exfoliants. Slight stickiness.

Serious

None.

Rare

Mild irritation in extremely reactive skin.

Squalane

Common

Essentially none. May cause breakouts in a small percentage of people despite low comedogenic rating.

Serious

None.

Rare

Allergic reaction is extremely rare.

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