Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary)
- Nonionic surfactants
- CAS trade-secret
- IUPAC: unknown (trade secret)
Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) (CAS trade-secret) appears in 1 of the 1,812 car-care products CarCareTruth tracks (as of June 2026). It is readily biodegradable.
Trade-secret proprietary blend per SDS. No specific surfactant identity or CAS number disclosed. SDS classifies the product as non-hazardous with no hazardous ingredients.
Proprietary surfactant and polymer emulsion used as the active cleaning component in Aero Cosmetics interior cleaning products. The exact identity is a trade secret per the product SDS. The brand describes the formula as water-based, alcohol-free, and ammonia-free. SDS Section 12 states no adverse effects on aquatic organisms and confirms biodegradability in soil.
Health & environment profile
- VOC
- no
- Prop 65 listed
- no
- Asthmagen
- no
- EPA Safer Choice
- no
- Aquatic toxicity
- no
- Biodegradable
- yes
- Bioaccumulative
- no
- Persistent
- no
- Ozone depleting
- no
- Microplastic
- no
- PFAS
- no
- Env. score
- 5/5
Common questions about Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary)
- What is Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) used for in car care?
- Active cleaning surfactant and polymer blend; removes soils from fabric, carpet, leather, and vinyl surfaces.
- Is Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) a VOC?
- No. Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) is not classified as a volatile organic compound (VOC).
- Is Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) on California's Proposition 65 list?
- No. Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) is not on California's Proposition 65 list.
- Is Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) biodegradable?
- Yes. Surfactant/Polymer Emulsion (Proprietary) has a confirmed biodegradable profile.
1 product contain this
Aero Cosmetics Interior Cleanerfabric-upholstery-cleaner
Related
Health and environment notes translate the manufacturer Safety Data Sheet, the GHS classification, and authoritative regulatory listings (California Prop 65, EPA). Not medical advice. They describe the ingredient itself; whether a hazard applies to a finished product depends on its concentration and how it's used.