The Structural Logic of Amphoteric Surfactants: Representative Ingredients, Performance Mechanisms, and Formulation Applications in Personal Care and Home Care
The Structural Logic of Amphoteric Surfactants: Representative Ingredients, Performance Mechanisms, and Formulation Applications in Personal Care and Home Care
1. What Are Zwitterionic Surfactants?
A zwitterion refers to a molecule that contains both a formal positive charge and a formal negative charge within the same molecule, while remaining electrically neutral overall. This type of structure is also commonly referred to as an inner salt structure. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) defines a zwitterion as a neutral compound bearing formal charges of opposite sign.
In the personal care and home-care industry, zwitterionic surfactants generally refer to a class of surfactants that contain both a hydrophobic chain and a zwitterionic hydrophilic head group within the same molecule. Like conventional surfactants, they can participate in oil emulsification, micelle formation, and interfacial adsorption. At the same time, because positive and negative charges coexist in the molecule, they can modulate charge interactions, micelle structure, foam behavior, and irritation potential in anionic surfactant systems. “Amphoteric” means that the hydrophilic head group has both positive and negative electrical characteristics or acid-base duality.
In personal care and home-care formulations, the term “amphoteric surfactants” is often used as a broad concept and generally includes two categories:
Type | Charge Characteristics | Common Representatives in Personal Care and Home-Care Applications |
Typical zwitterionic surfactants | Contain both a positive center and a negative center within the same molecule, with an approximately neutral overall charge | Betaine types, sulfobetaine types, hydroxysultaine types |
Broadly defined amphoteric surfactants | The charge state may vary with acidity or alkalinity (pH), showing cationic, anionic, or zwitterionic characteristics under different conditions | Amphoacetates, amphopropionates, amine oxides |
The “zwitterionic surfactants” discussed in this article are based on the broad category commonly used in the personal care and home-care industry, with a focus on cleansing ingredients commonly used in formulations, such as betaines, sulfobetaines, hydroxysultaines, and typical amphoacetates.
2. Molecular Structure of Zwitterionic Surfactants
2.1 Basic Structure of Zwitterionic Surfactants
A typical zwitterionic surfactant can be simplified into three structural units:
Hydrophobic chain — Linker group — Zwitterionic hydrophilic head group
The hydrophobic chain is responsible for entering oily soils, sebum, and the micelle core. The hydrophilic head group enters the aqueous phase and forms ordered arrangements at interfaces. The positive and negative charge structures regulate charge interactions, hydration capacity, and micelle morphology.
Structural Unit | Common Structures | Main Functions |
Hydrophobic chain | C8-C18 alkyl groups, coco groups, lauryl groups, myristyl groups, amidopropyl fatty chains | Determines cleansing, foaming, emulsification, and micelle-forming ability |
Linker group | Amide group, propyl group, hydroxypropyl group, methylene group, etc. | Affects molecular flexibility, head-group packing, and hydration state |
Positive charge center | Quaternary ammonium salt, protonated tertiary amine, amine oxide structure | Influences interactions with anionic surfactants, proteins, and hair surfaces |
Negative charge center | Carboxylate, sulfonate, phosphate, etc. | Determines water solubility, hydrophilicity, pH adaptability, and charge balance |
The distinctive feature of zwitterionic surfactants is concentrated in the hydrophilic head group. It is not a purely negatively charged or purely positively charged structure; instead, positive and negative electrical characteristics coexist within the same molecule. This structure allows the surfactant to participate in interfacial adsorption while also moderating strong charge interactions in a formulation.
2.2 Typical Structural Formulas
Type | Simplified Structural Formula | Structural Characteristics | Performance Tendencies Derived from Structure |
Alkyl betaine type | R-N⁺(CH₃)₂-CH₂-COO⁻ | A quaternary ammonium positive center coexists with a carboxylate negative center | Good foam performance and relatively good mildness; suitable for blending with anionic surfactants |
Amidopropyl betaine type | R-CO-NH-(CH₂)₃-N⁺(CH₃)₂-CH₂-COO⁻ | An amidopropyl linker arm is present between the hydrophobic chain and the betaine head group | Good compatibility, fine foam, commonly used in shampoos, body washes, and facial cleansers |
Sulfobetaine type | R-N⁺(CH₃)₂-(CH₂)₃-SO₃⁻ | The negative charge center is a sulfonate group | Stable ionization; generally good salt tolerance and broad pH adaptability |
Hydroxysultaine type | R-CO-NH-(CH₂)₃-N⁺(CH₃)₂-CH₂-CH(OH)-CH₂-SO₃⁻ | Contains both sulfonate and hydroxyl structures | Stable foam and good mildness; suitable for low-irritation cleansing systems |
Amphoacetate type | R-CO-NH-CH₂CH₂-NH⁺/N-(CH₂COO⁻), etc. | Amine structure coexists with carboxylate structure; charge state is affected by pH | Relatively good mildness; commonly used in facial cleansers and baby and child care cleansing products |
Amine oxide type | R-N⁺(CH₃)₂-O⁻ | Amine oxide polar structure, which can be represented in the N⁺–O⁻ form; electrical behavior is affected by pH | Foam boosting, detergency synergy, and auxiliary thickening; commonly used in personal cleansing and home-care products |
Note: R represents a fatty alkyl or fatty acyl hydrophobic chain. Commercial raw materials are usually mixtures of different carbon-chain lengths. The structural formulas are used to illustrate the main structural features and do not represent a single purified compound.
2.3 How Structure Is Translated into Performance
The key capabilities of zwitterionic surfactants can be directly inferred from their structure.
Structural Feature | Molecular-Level Effect | Formulation Performance |
Hydrophobic chain enters the oil phase | Reduces oil-water interfacial tension and participates in micellar solubilization | Cleansing, emulsification, oil removal |
Coexistence of positive and negative charges | Moderates strong charge interactions in a single anionic system | Reduces irritation and improves compatibility |
Strongly hydrated head group | Forms a stable hydration layer around the head group | Reduces strong adsorption and improves mildness |
Formation of mixed micelles with anionic surfactants | Changes micelle size, morphology, and surface charge | Produces finer foam and makes the system easier to thicken |
pH-responsive structure | Charge state changes under different pH conditions | Affects performance in facial cleansers, shampoos, home-care products, and other systems |
3. Main Types, Representative Ingredients, and Performance Differences
3.1 Betaine Type: A Widely Used Basic Category in Personal Care and Home-Care Applications
The typical structure of betaine-type surfactants is:
Quaternary ammonium positive center + Carboxylate negative center + Fatty hydrophobic chain
Representative ingredients include Cocamidopropyl Betaine (CAPB), Coco Betaine, Lauryl Betaine, and others.Among them, CAPB is a typical representative. Its structure can be expressed as:
R-CO-NH-(CH₂)₃-N⁺(CH₃)₂-CH₂-COO⁻
The structural feature of CAPB is that an amidopropyl linker arm exists between the hydrophobic fatty chain and the betaine head group, giving the molecule good water solubility, foam performance, and compatibility in blends. It is commonly used in shampoos, body washes, facial cleansers, and hand washes, mainly contributing to irritation reduction, foam stabilization, improved skin feel, and auxiliary thickening. The advantage of betaine-type surfactants lies in their balanced overall performance. They are usually not the strongest cleansing agents or the strongest thickeners, but in anionic primary surfactant systems, they can improve several key performance indicators at the same time. This is why they are widely used.
3.2 Sulfobetaines and Hydroxysultaines: Relatively More Stable Negative Charge Centers
The typical structure of sulfobetaine-type surfactants is:
Quaternary ammonium positive center + Sulfonate negative center + Hydrophobic chain
Representative ingredients include Cocamidopropyl Hydroxysultaine, Lauryl Hydroxysultaine, Coco-Sultaine, and others.The simplified structure of a hydroxysultaine can be expressed as:
R-CO-NH-(CH₂)₃-N⁺(CH₃)₂-CH₂-CH(OH)-CH₂-SO₃⁻
Compared with carboxylates, sulfonate negative charge centers are more stably ionized. Therefore, these ingredients usually show better stability over a broader pH range and in salt-containing systems. They are often used in cleansing products that emphasize low irritation, foam stability, and formulation robustness.
3.3 Amphoacetates and Amphopropionates: Mild Surfactants More Strongly Affected by pH
Amphoacetates and amphopropionates are usually composed of fatty acid-derived structures, amine structures, and carboxylate structures. Representative ingredients include Sodium Cocoamphoacetate, Disodium Cocoamphodiacetate, Sodium Lauroamphoacetate, and others.
The charge state of this type of ingredient is readily affected by pH. Under acidic conditions, the amine structure is more easily protonated, and cationic characteristics become stronger. Under neutral or slightly alkaline conditions, carboxylate characteristics become more prominent.
Their formulation value is mainly reflected in: ① low-irritation cleansing; ② facial cleansers and baby and child care cleansing products; ③ blending with anionic and nonionic surfactants; and ④ improving the soft, mild skin feel of cleansing systems.
3.4 Amine Oxides: Significant Foam and Detergency Synergy
Common representatives of amine oxides include Lauramine Oxide, Cocamine Oxide, Myristamine Oxide, and others. Their simplified structure is:
R-N⁺(CH₃)₂-O⁻
From the perspective of formal structure, amine oxides have an N⁺–O⁻ polar structure. From the perspective of formulation behavior, they are closer to nonionic surfactants under neutral and slightly alkaline conditions, while their cationic characteristics become stronger under more strongly acidic conditions. Amine oxides are common in home-care products, dishwashing liquids, hand washes, and some personal cleansing products. They are often combined with anionic surfactants to improve foam stability, enhance oil-removal performance, and improve system viscosity.
4. Mechanisms of Action
4.1 Irritation Reduction: Changing How Surfactants Interact with Skin and Hair
Cleansing power and irritation both originate from the interaction between surfactants and interfaces. Surfactants need to enter the oil-water interface and disperse sebum and oily soils into water. However, if the interaction is too strong, it may also affect stratum corneum lipids, skin proteins, and the ocular mucosa. The key to reducing irritation is to make the mode of action milder.
Zwitterionic surfactants often form mixed micelles with anionic surfactants. Taking the SLES (Sodium Laureth Sulfate)/CAPB system as an example, studies show that the microstructure and rheological properties of this system can change significantly with ionic strength. Such mixed micelle structures influence free monomers, micelle size, micelle morphology, and surface charge distribution.
System Change | Effect on Irritation |
Reduced concentrated exposure of anionic head groups | Reduces the direct action of strongly negatively charged surfaces on proteins and lipids |
Change in free monomer state | Reduces rapid penetration and disruption of skin structures by highly active monomers |
More ordered micelle structure | Makes cleansing action milder and reduces the tendency toward irritation |
Enhanced head-group hydration | Reduces strong adsorption onto proteins and stratum corneum lipids |
4.2 Foam Improvement: Making Foam Films Finer and More Stable
Anionic surfactants usually foam quickly and generate high foam volume, but the foam film may be relatively thin, and the irritation potential may also be stronger. After zwitterionic surfactants are added, the arrangement of the gas-liquid interfacial film can be improved. Their main functions include:
① Participating in adsorption at the gas-liquid interface and reducing interfacial tension;
② Co-arranging with anionic surfactants to make the foam film more stable;
③ Enhancing the water retention and flexibility of the foam film through strongly hydrated head groups;
④ Moderating the irritation feel of strongly anionic systems and making the foam feel softer.
4.3 Auxiliary Thickening: Promoting the Transformation of Micelles from Small Aggregates to Long Micelles
In SLES (Sodium Laureth Sulfate)/CAPB or AES (Alkyl Ether Sulfate)/CAPB systems, the addition of an appropriate amount of sodium chloride often leads to significant thickening. This does not mean that CAPB itself becomes a thickener; rather, the micellar structure of the mixed surfactant system changes.
Surfactant micelles may undergo the following transformation:
Spherical micelles → Short rod-like micelles → Long rod-like micelles → Wormlike micelles
When micelles become longer and become entangled, the system develops clear viscoelasticity. Macroscopically, this appears as increased viscosity, enhanced cling to surfaces, and a richer, more structured texture.
Zwitterionic surfactants play two types of roles in this process:
① Moderating electrostatic repulsion between anionic head groups
There is repulsion between the head groups of anionic surfactants, which is unfavorable for unrestricted micellar growth. The local positive charge center in CAPB can moderate this repulsion.
② Working with electrolytes to produce charge screening
After electrolytes such as sodium chloride are added, repulsion between head groups is further reduced, making it easier for micelles to grow and become entangled.
It should be noted that salt thickening usually has an optimal salt concentration range. More salt does not necessarily mean higher viscosity. Excessive electrolyte may lead to viscosity reduction, turbidity, foam reduction, or phase separation.
4.4 Compatibility Improvement: Moderating Charge Conflicts in Formulations
Shampoos, body washes, and facial cleansers are usually not single-surfactant systems. Instead, they contain anionic surfactants, amphoteric surfactants, nonionic surfactants, cationic polymers, silicone emulsions, humectants, preservatives, fragrances, electrolytes, and other components. Among these, strong electrostatic interactions can easily occur between anionic surfactants and cationic conditioning ingredients. If the interaction is too strong, it may lead to turbidity, precipitation, foam reduction, uneven conditioning deposition, or reduced stability.
Many typical zwitterionic surfactants are approximately neutral overall, while containing both local positive and negative charges. As a result, they can provide a charge-buffering effect in the system:
① Reducing the charge concentration of strongly anionic surfactants;
② Regulating the surface charge of mixed micelles;
③ Moderating direct conflicts between cationic polymers and anionic surfactants;
④ Improving the interactions among micelles, polymers, and conditioning ingredients during dilution.
5. Selection Logic in Personal Care and Home-Care Applications
5.1 Different Products Have Different Key Requirements
Product Type | Core Formulation Requirements | Main Contributions of Zwitterionic Surfactants |
Shampoo | Cleansing, foam, viscosity, conditioning deposition, scalp mildness | Form mixed micelles with anionic surfactants, reduce irritation, improve foam and viscosity, and influence conditioning deposition |
Body wash | Rich foam, non-tight skin feel after washing, system stability | Improve foam fineness and stability, and reduce the feeling of excessive degreasing |
Facial cleanser | Mild cleansing, reduced tightness, low irritation | Reduce the direct action of strong surfactants on facial skin, and improve foam and rinsing feel |
Hand wash | Cleansing power and hand comfort under frequent washing | Improve foam and reduce the tendency toward dryness and irritation |
Baby and child care cleansing products | Low-irritation tendency, eye-irritation control, easy rinsing | Build mild cleansing systems and reduce the proportion of strong anionic surfactants |
Dishwashing liquids and home-care products | Oil removal, long-lasting foam, salt tolerance, cost balance | Work synergistically with anionic/nonionic surfactants to improve foam and detergency |
5.2 Judging the Formulation Role of Ingredients from Structural Features
Formulation Goal | Preferred Structural Types | Selection Logic |
Reduce irritation from anionic surfactants | Betaine type, hydroxysultaine type, amphoacetate type | Able to form mixed micelles and moderate the action of strongly anionic surfactants |
Improve foam fineness | CAPB, Lauryl Betaine, hydroxysultaines | Improve gas-liquid interfacial film arrangement and foam-film stability |
Assist salt thickening | CAPB combined with anionic surfactants such as SLES/AES | Promote micelle growth and the formation of wormlike micelles |
Improve salt tolerance and broad pH adaptability | Sulfobetaines, hydroxysultaines | Sulfonate negative charge centers are usually more stable |
Build low-irritation facial cleanser or baby and child care systems | Amphoacetates, mild betaine-type surfactants | Under suitable pH and blending conditions, they help reduce irritation tendency, but final formulation testing is still required for confirmation |
Improve oil removal and foam in home-care products | Amine oxides, betaine-type surfactants | Produce detergency and foam synergy with anionic and nonionic surfactants |
5.3 pH and Impurity Control Affect Actual Performance
The performance of zwitterionic surfactants is closely related to pH. Betaine types usually show stable zwitterionic characteristics within the common pH range of personal care products. Sulfobetaines generally have stronger pH adaptability because of the stability of the sulfonate group. Amphoacetates and amphopropionates show more obvious pH-dependent charge states. Amine oxides exhibit stronger cationic characteristics under acidic conditions. The same type of ingredient may behave differently in shampoos, facial cleansers, baby and child care products, and home-care products. Therefore, formulation design should take the final pH and overall system composition into account.
In addition, raw material purity also affects safety. Taking CAPB as an example, cosmetic ingredient safety assessment literature indicates that its potential sensitization risk is often associated with impurities such as 3-(dimethylamino)propylamine (DMAPA; also known as N,N-dimethyl-1,3-propanediamine) and amidoamines. Therefore, when selecting CAPB, attention should be paid to free amines, DMAPA, amidoamines, sodium chloride, color, odor, and batch-to-batch stability.
6. Summary: The Underlying Logic of Zwitterionic Surfactants
Zwitterionic surfactants are important in personal care and home-care formulations because they simultaneously contain a hydrophobic chain, a positive charge center, and a negative charge center. The hydrophobic chain enables them to participate in cleansing and micelle formation. The positive and negative charges can regulate charge interactions and hydration state. Their ability to form mixed micelles affects foam, viscosity, irritation potential, and compatibility.
The functions of zwitterionic surfactants can be summarized at four levels:
Level | Mechanism of Action | Product Performance |
Interfacial level | Reduces oil-water and gas-liquid interfacial tension | Cleansing, foaming, emulsification |
Micellar level | Forms mixed micelles with anionic surfactants | Reduces irritation, improves foam, assists thickening |
Charge level | Moderates the surface charge of strongly anionic systems | Improves mildness and formulation compatibility |
Hydration level | Forms a strong hydration structure through positive and negative charges | Reduces strong adsorption and improves skin feel and irritation tendency |
7. Classification Tables of Representative Chemicals Related to Zwitterionic Surfactants
Table 1. Core Zwitterionic and Broadly Defined Amphoteric Surfactants
Category | CAS No. | Aladdin Cat. No. | Name | Specification or Purity | Product Features and Applications |
Amidopropyl betaine-type zwitterionic surfactant | 61789-40-0 | Cocamidopropyl Betaine | Actives content 28%-32% in water | Used for studies on mild cleansing, foam improvement, blending with anionic surfactants, and salt-thickening systems; suitable for formulation development of shampoos, body washes, facial cleansers, and hand washes | |
Alkyl betaine-type zwitterionic surfactant | 683-10-3 | Lauryl Betaine | ≥95% (HPLC) | Used for structure-performance studies of betaine-type surfactants, foam performance evaluation, interfacial tension testing, and blending studies for mild cleansing systems | |
Alkyl betaine-type zwitterionic surfactant | 2601-33-4 | (N,N-Dimethylmyristylamino)acetate | ≥97% (HPLC) | Used for studies on long-chain betaine surfactants, micellar behavior analysis, foam stability testing, and the effect of carbon-chain length on surface activity | |
Sulfobetaine-type zwitterionic surfactant | 14933-08-5 | Dodecyldimethyl(3-sulfopropyl)ammonium hydroxide inner salt [for biochemical research] | ≥98% | Used for sulfobetaine structure studies, mild protein solubilization, membrane-protein-related experiments, and studies on strongly hydrated zwitterionic interfacial behavior | |
Amphoacetate-type surfactant | 68334-21-4 | Sodium Cocoamphoacetate | ≥40% | Used for studies on low-irritation cleansing systems, facial cleanser formulations, and baby and child care cleansing formulations; applicable to mild foam systems and blending with anionic surfactants | |
Amine oxide-type broadly defined amphoteric surfactant | 1643-20-5 | N,N-Dimethyldodecylamine N-oxide (DDAO) | BioReagent, ≥99% | Used for micelle formation, membrane protein solubilization, foam boosting, detergency synergy, and scientific research on amine oxide-type surfactants | |
Amine oxide-type broadly defined amphoteric surfactant | 3332-27-2 | N,N-Dimethyltetradecylamine N-oxide | ≥98% (NT) | Used for studies on long-chain amine oxide surfactants, micellar structure analysis, foam stability testing, and evaluation of detergency synergy in cleansing systems | |
Amidopropyl amine oxide-type broadly defined amphoteric surfactant | 61792-31-2 | Lauramidopropylamine Oxide | — | Used for foam improvement, auxiliary thickening, blending studies for mild cleansing systems, and studies on synergy with anionic surfactants |
Table 2. Primary Surfactants Related to Blending with Zwitterionic Surfactants
Category | CAS No. | Aladdin Cat. No. | Name | Specification or Purity | Product Features and Applications |
Sulfate-type anionic surfactant | 151-21-3 | Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate (SDS) | Anhydrous, ACS, ≥99% | Used as a standard model anionic surfactant, for micellar behavior studies, protein denaturation experiments, and comparative studies on foam and irritation | |
Sulfate-type anionic surfactant | 2235-54-3 | Ammonium Lauryl Sulfate Solution | 30% in H₂O | Used for blending studies in shampoo and cleansing systems; can be combined with amphoteric surfactants to evaluate changes in foam, cleansing power, and irritation | |
Ether sulfate-type anionic surfactant | 9004-82-4 | Sodium Polyoxyethylene Lauryl Ether Sulfate | ≥25% | Used for studies on blending anionic surfactants with betaines, mixed micelles, salt thickening, foam, and mildness evaluation | |
Olefin sulfonate-type anionic surfactant | 68439-57-6 | Sodium α-Olefin Sulfonate | ≥92% | Used for studies on strong-cleansing and high-foam systems; can be combined with betaines and hydroxysultaines to evaluate the balance among detergency, foam, and irritation | |
Sulfoacetate-type anionic surfactant | 1847-58-1 | Sodium Lauryl Sulfoacetate | ≥97% | Used for studies on low-irritation foaming cleansing systems, facial cleansers, and solid cleansing products; can be blended with amphoteric surfactants to improve foam structure | |
Sarcosinate-type amino acid surfactant | 137-16-6 | Sodium N-Lauroylsarcosinate | UltraBio™, Molecular Biology Grade, ultrapure grade, ≥99% (HPLC) | Used for studies on mild anionic surfactants, blending of amino acid-based cleansing systems, protein-related experiments, and foam performance evaluation | |
Glutamate-type amino acid surfactant | 29923-31-7 | Sodium Lauroyl Glutamate | ≥95% | Used for amino acid-based facial cleansers, mild cleansing systems, weakly acidic formulations, and blending studies with amphoteric surfactants | |
Taurate-type anionic surfactant | 137-20-2 | Sodium N-methyl-N-oleoyltaurate | ≥97% | Used for studies on mild anionic surfactants, low-irritation cleansing systems, emulsification and dispersion, and blending evaluation with amphoteric surfactants | |
Alkyl glycoside-type nonionic surfactant | 68515-73-1 | Decyl Glucoside (APG) | Moligand™, 60% in H₂O | Used for mild nonionic cleansing systems, plant-derived surfactant formulations, foam modulation, and synergy studies with amphoteric surfactants | |
Alkyl glycoside-type nonionic surfactant | 59122-55-3 | Dodecyl Glucopyranoside | ≥99% | Used as a nonionic surfactant model, for micellar behavior analysis, mild membrane protein solubilization, and structure-performance studies of glycoside surfactants | |
Alkyl glycoside-type nonionic surfactant | 110615-47-9 | Lauryl Glucoside | ≥40% | Used for mild cleansing systems, blending of nonionic and amphoteric surfactants, foam modulation, and low-irritation formulation studies |
Table 3. Raw Materials Related to Zwitterionic Surfactant Structure Construction and Quality Control
Category | CAS No. | Aladdin Cat. No. | Name | Specification or Purity | Product Features and Applications |
Hydrophobic-chain structural raw material | 143-07-7 | Lauric Acid | GR, ≥99% | Used for synthesis of fatty acyl surfactants, carbon-chain structure studies, and studies on the relationship between surfactant hydrophobic chains and foam/cleansing performance | |
Raw material related to betainization reactions | 3926-62-3 | Sodium Chloroacetate | AR, ≥98% | Used for betaine structure construction, synthesis of quaternary ammonium carboxylate inner salts, and experiments related to the preparation of zwitterionic surfactants | |
Raw material related to amidopropyl betaine synthesis and quality control | 109-55-7 | 3-(Dimethylamino)propylamine (DMAPA) | ≥99% | Used for preparation of amidopropyl betaine intermediates, raw material impurity studies, and experiments related to surfactant safety and quality control |
Note: The products listed above are representative Aladdin products related to scientific research and formulation research. They are mainly intended for laboratory research, formulation screening, performance evaluation, or quality control studies. This information does not indicate that the products can be directly used in the production or application of cosmetics, finished personal care or home-care products, or other end-use products. Before any practical application, confirmation should be made based on the product instructions, COA, SDS, applicable regulations, quality standards, and safety and compliance evaluation of the final formulation. For more information on product specifications, grades, and COA, please search by “product name/CAS/Aladdin Cat. No.” on the Aladdin website.
For more related articles, please see below:
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