Skip to content
CarCareTruthProducts · Ranked

Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate

  • Anionic surfactants
  • CAS 97489-15-1
  • IUPAC: secondary alkane sulfonate, sodium salt (C14-C17)

Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate (CAS 97489-15-1) appears in 2 of the 1,812 car-care products CarCareTruth tracks (as of June 2026). It is readily biodegradable.

Mild to moderate skin and eye irritant at concentrated levels. At consumer-product dilutions, generally below GHS classification thresholds for the mixture. No Prop 65 listing.

Sodium C14-17 alkyl sec sulfonate (secondary alkane sulfonate, or SAS) is an anionic surfactant used in hard-surface cleaners and glass cleaners. It provides wetting, soil dispersion, and cleaning performance. SAS is more resistant to hard-water deactivation than some anionic surfactants, making it useful in multi-surface formulations. It is biodegradable and not classified as an aquatic hazard at typical product concentrations.

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
Purpose: Anionic surfactant — wetting and cleaning agent in hard-surface cleaners

Common questions about Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate

What is Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate used for in car care?
Anionic surfactant — wetting and cleaning agent in hard-surface cleaners
Is Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate a VOC?
No. Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate is not classified as a volatile organic compound (VOC).
Is Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate on California's Proposition 65 list?
No. Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate is not on California's Proposition 65 list.
Is Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate biodegradable?
Yes. Sodium C14-17 Alkyl Sec Sulfonate has a confirmed biodegradable profile.

2 products contain this

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.