Determination of Total Fatty Matter (TFM) in Creams: A Practical Chemist’s Guide
In cosmetic and pharmaceutical creams, the fatty matter phase plays a major role in texture, stability, moisturization, spreadability, and skin feel. Determining the Total Fatty Matter (TFM) is an important quality control test used in creams, lotions, emulsions, and semisolid formulations.
This article explains:
- What TFM means
- International guideline approaches
- The chemistry behind the test
- Laboratory workflow
- Reagent preparation from bottle labels
- Calculations
- Practical hands-on procedure
- Common errors and troubleshooting
What is Total Fatty Matter (TFM)?
Total Fatty Matter refers to the total amount of:
- Oils
- Waxes
- Fatty alcohols
- Fatty acids
- Esters
- Lipophilic emollients
present in a cream formulation.
It is usually expressed as:
Why TFM Testing is Important
TFM affects:
- Moisturizing performance
- Skin occlusivity
- Stability
- Sensory feel
- Regulatory compliance
- Batch consistency
Low TFM may indicate:
- Wrong formulation
- Excess water
- Raw material shortage
- Processing problems
High TFM may indicate:
- Overdosing oils/waxes
- Water evaporation loss
- Emulsion imbalance
International Guidelines and References
Chemists generally follow methods adapted from:
- ISO cosmetic testing methods
- BIS methods
- AOAC extraction principles
- USP/NF semisolid analytical approaches
- Internal validated QC SOPs
Commonly used analytical principles include:
- Solvent extraction
- Acid hydrolysis
- Gravimetric analysis
Chemistry Behind TFM Determination
Creams are mostly emulsions.
They contain:
| Component | Nature |
|---|---|
| Water | Polar |
| Oils/Waxes | Nonpolar |
| Emulsifiers | Amphiphilic |
| Preservatives | Polar/nonpolar |
| Fragrance | Mostly nonpolar |
The main chemistry principle is:
“Like dissolves like.”
Nonpolar fatty materials dissolve in nonpolar solvents such as:
- Petroleum ether
- Hexane
- Diethyl ether
Water-soluble components remain behind.
Sometimes acidification is required to:
- Break the emulsion
- Convert soaps into free fatty acids
- Release bound fatty materials
Common Solvents Used
| Solvent | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Petroleum ether | Fat extraction |
| Hexane | Oil extraction |
| Diethyl ether | Fat dissolution |
| Ethanol | Sample dispersion |
| Hydrochloric acid | Emulsion breaking |
Basic Principle of the Method
The cream is:
- Weighed accurately
- Acidified if needed
- Extracted with organic solvent
- Solvent layer separated
- Solvent evaporated
- Remaining residue weighed
The residue is considered total fatty matter.
Reminder: In our experience, we see that many chemists face challenges in understanding LOD and LOQ. So you may go through that article also.
Laboratory Apparatus
Glassware
- Beaker
- Separating funnel
- Conical flask
- Measuring cylinder
- Pipette
- Volumetric flask
Instruments
- Analytical balance
- Water bath
- Hot plate
- Oven
- Desiccator
Safety Precautions
Organic solvents are:
- Highly flammable
- Volatile
- Harmful by inhalation
Always use:
- Fume hood
- Gloves
- Goggles
- Explosion-safe heating
Never heat solvents directly on open flame.
Hands-On Practical Method
Example Cream Formula
Suppose a cream contains:
| Ingredient | % |
|---|---|
| Water | 68 |
| Mineral oil | 12 |
| Stearic acid | 8 |
| Cetyl alcohol | 4 |
| Emulsifier | 3 |
| Glycerin | 4 |
| Preservatives | 1 |
Expected fatty matter ≈ 24%
You may also have interest in exploring more formulations beyond the example cream formula. Explore our formulation category here.
Step 1: Sample Weighing
Weigh accurately:
cream into a beaker.
Step 2: Add Acid
Add:
- 20 mL dilute HCl
Purpose:
- Break emulsion
- Convert soap forms into fatty acids
Heat gently at 60–70°C.
Step 3: Solvent Extraction
Transfer into a separating funnel.
Add:
- 30 mL petroleum ether
Shake carefully.
Allow separation.
The upper organic layer contains fats/oils.
Repeat extraction 3 times.
Step 4: Collect Organic Layer
Combine all organic extracts into a pre-weighed flask.
Example:
- Empty flask weight = 52.214 g
Step 5: Evaporate Solvent
Evaporate solvent using:
- Water bath
- Rotary evaporator
Dry residue in oven at 105°C.
Cool in a desiccator.
Step 6: Final Weighing
Suppose:
- Flask + residue = 53.401 g
Therefore:
Final TFM Calculation
Sample weight:
TFM:
How a Chemist Makes Reagents from Bottle Labels
This is a critical QC skill.
Just a minute before starting the examples, we have an article for you, overviewing the Chemical Analysis and Quality Control in Chemistry.
Example 1: Preparing 0.1 N HCl
Bottle label says:
- HCl = 37%
- Specific gravity = 1.18
- Molecular weight = 36.46
Step 1: Calculate Concentration
Pure HCl per liter:
Molarity:
Since HCl has 1 replaceable H⁺:
Step 2: Use Dilution Formula
To prepare 1 L of 0.1 N HCl:
So:
Take 8.35 mL concentrated HCl and dilute to 1 liter.
Example 2: Preparing 70% Ethanol
Suppose bottle says:
- Ethanol = 99.9%
Need 500 mL of 70%.
Using dilution:
Add water up to 500 mL.
Common Sources of Error
| Error | Effect |
|---|---|
| Incomplete extraction | Low TFM |
| Solvent loss | Wrong results |
| Water contamination | High TFM |
| Improper drying | False high value |
| Emulsion not broken | Poor recovery |
Validation Parameters
According to QC standards, methods should be validated for:
- Accuracy
- Precision
- Repeatability
- Specificity
- Robustness
Advanced Instrumental Approaches
Modern laboratories may also use:
- Soxhlet extraction
- GC-FID
- FTIR
- NMR
- Gravimetric automation
But classical solvent extraction remains widely used because it is:
- Simple
- Cheap
- Reliable
Real Industrial QC Perspective
In industry, chemists usually:
- Follow SOP exactly
- Use calibrated balances
- Maintain extraction time
- Standardize reagents
- Run blanks
- Record all calculations in the worksheet
A QC chemist must understand both:
- Practical handling
- Underlying chemistry
because troubleshooting depends on scientific understanding.
Final Thoughts
Determining Total Fatty Matter in cream is fundamentally a combination of:
- Emulsion chemistry
- Solvent extraction
- Acid-base chemistry
- Gravimetric analysis
A skilled chemist does not only follow SOPs mechanically. They understand:
- Why acid breaks emulsions
- Why nonpolar solvents extract fats
- Why drying is critical
- How concentration calculations are made from reagent bottle labels
This combination of analytical chemistry and practical laboratory execution is what separates a trained formulation or QC chemist from someone who only memorizes procedures.
At the end of the determination of total fatty matter, you may be interested in determining the potency of your cream if it has actives like vitamin C, niacinamide, or something like that. Don't worry, we have a guide on this as well. Access it here: Calculate Potency of Any Solution Using UV Spectrophotometer
