Overview #
pH is not the primary selection criterion here. Particle architecture is. When a brand partner comes to us with an encapsulation brief, the first question we ask is not “what active do you want to protect?” — it’s “what does the active need to survive, and what does the skin need to receive?” SLN and NLC are not interchangeable delivery systems with minor differences. They have fundamentally different internal structures, and that structure determines everything from encapsulation efficiency to release kinetics to how the formula feels on skin. Choosing the wrong one doesn’t just affect stability. It affects whether the active reaches the target site at all.
SLN vs NLC: What the Structure Actually Means at Bench Scale #
A solid lipid nanoparticle is exactly what it sounds like — a matrix of solid lipid, crystallized, with the active theoretically distributed inside. The problem we run into constantly is that crystallization is the enemy of encapsulation. As the lipid solidifies during cooling, it forms a highly ordered crystal lattice. Active molecules get pushed to the surface or expelled entirely. We’ve measured encapsulation efficiency (EE%) on SLN batches for lipophilic actives like retinol and CoQ10 dropping from 85% at lab scale to under 60% after three freeze-thaw cycles. That’s not a formulation failure. That’s physics.
NLC — nanostructured lipid carriers — solves this by blending solid and liquid lipids in a ratio typically between 70:30 and 50:50 (solid:liquid). The liquid lipid disrupts crystal packing, creating structural imperfections that actually trap the active more effectively. In our lab, NLC systems for retinol routinely achieve EE% above 88%, and we’ve held that above 82% through 12 weeks at 40°C/75% RH. That’s the number that matters for ICH-aligned accelerated stability.
The trade-off is physical stability. SLN particles are harder, more uniform, and easier to characterize. NLC particles are structurally heterogeneous by design — which is a feature for encapsulation but a challenge for batch-to-batch consistency. Our QC team runs dynamic light scattering (DLS) on every production batch, and NLC PDI (polydispersity index) targets sit at ≤0.25. Above 0.30, we flag the batch. Above 0.35, we reject it.
| Parameter | SLN | NLC |
|---|---|---|
| Encapsulation Efficiency (lipophilic actives) | 55–75% | 80–92% |
| Crystal Order | High (ordered lattice) | Low (amorphous/disordered) |
| Active Expulsion Risk on Storage | Moderate–High | Low |
| PDI Target (production) | ≤0.20 | ≤0.25 |
| Typical Particle Size Range | 50–200 nm | 100–400 nm |
| Preferred Active Type | Hydrophilic, low-load | Lipophilic, high-load, sensitive |
| Skin Feel | Lighter, less occlusive | Slightly richer, film-forming |
For regulatory reference, both systems fall under the broader nanomaterial guidance framework. If you’re targeting EU markets, the EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009 requires nanomaterial notification and safety assessment — and “nanoparticle” on-pack triggers specific labeling obligations. We walk every brand partner through this before we finalize the system.
The 4 Selection Criteria We Actually Use #
1. Active polarity and load
This is the first filter. Lipophilic actives — retinol, tocopherol, CoQ10, bakuchiol, certain ceramides — belong in NLC. The disordered lipid matrix accommodates them. Hydrophilic actives are harder in both systems, but SLN with a hydrophilic shell modification can work for low-load applications. When a brand asks us to encapsulate vitamin C (ascorbic acid) in a lipid nanoparticle, we push back immediately. The water activity inside an SLN or NLC is not zero, and ascorbic acid degrades fast in that environment. We redirect those briefs toward our vitamin C antioxidant systems using anhydrous or polymer-based encapsulation instead.
2. Target release profile
Sustained release or burst? SLN gives you slower, more controlled release because the ordered matrix creates a genuine diffusion barrier. NLC releases faster — the disordered structure means less resistance. For a retinol night serum where you want gradual overnight delivery, NLC at 0.3–0.5% retinol load with a 70:30 solid-to-liquid ratio is our standard starting point. For a vitamin E antioxidant system where you want immediate bioavailability at the stratum corneum, SLN makes more sense.
3. Stability requirement and packaging format
Honestly, most brands underestimate how much packaging affects nanoparticle stability. We’ve had NLC dispersions that passed 12-week accelerated stability in glass vials and then failed within 6 weeks in HDPE tubes — the lipid components were migrating into the polymer wall. We now require compatibility testing with final packaging as a mandatory step, not optional. Airless pump formats are strongly preferred for both SLN and NLC systems. The cost is real — airless pump adds roughly $0.40–$0.80 per unit depending on MOQ and supplier — but for a nanoparticle-based active, it’s not optional if you want the shelf life claim to hold.
4. Regulatory destination
EU, US, and China have meaningfully different requirements. The FDA Cosmetics Guidelines don’t currently mandate pre-market nanomaterial notification for cosmetics, but the EU does under Regulation 1223/2009 Article 16. China’s NMPA Cosmetic Regulation has been tightening its position on novel delivery systems — new raw material registration requirements introduced in 2021 mean that certain NLC systems using non-listed lipid components may require additional filing. We’ve had projects delayed by 4–6 months because of this. Know your market before you finalize the lipid matrix.
Clinical Performance: What the Data Actually Shows #
The head-to-head encapsulation data for retinol is pretty clear. One double-blind, vehicle-controlled clinical study (n=42, 12 weeks, twice-daily application) comparing free retinol 0.3% against NLC-encapsulated retinol 0.3% showed a 34% reduction in fine line depth (profilometry) in the NLC group versus 19% in the free retinol group. Skin irritation scores (TEWL increase, erythema index) were also lower in the NLC group — 0.8 g/m²/h average TEWL increase versus 2.1 g/m²/h in the free retinol arm. That’s a meaningful difference for sensitive skin positioning.
What the study doesn’t tell you — and what we’ve learned from our own batches — is the stability story behind those numbers. Free retinol at 0.3% in a standard emulsion base loses roughly 40–60% potency by week 8 at 40°C. The NLC-encapsulated version in our internal testing retained above 85% potency at the same timepoint. So part of what you’re seeing in the clinical data is simply that the NLC group was still delivering active at week 12. The free retinol group may have been delivering significantly less than labeled.
For brands building a retinoid technology story, this is the argument for encapsulation. Not just skin tolerance. Actual delivered dose.
We’re still not fully convinced the clinical evidence for NLC in peptide delivery is strong enough to justify the cost premium in every application. Peptides are hydrophilic, and the lipid matrix isn’t their natural environment. The SCCS Scientific Opinion framework for nanomaterial safety assessment is also still evolving in this space. We tell brand partners: for peptides, evaluate polymer-based encapsulation first.
Where Most Brands Get This Wrong #
Scale-up. Every time.
The NLC system that performed beautifully at 500g lab scale — particle size 180 nm, PDI 0.18, EE% 89% — can look completely different at 50kg production. We’ve seen this more than once. The high-shear homogenization step that creates the nanoparticle dispersion is extremely sensitive to energy input per unit volume. At lab scale, we control this precisely. At production scale, the geometry of the vessel changes, the heat dissipation profile changes, and if the lipid melt temperature isn’t held within ±2°C during the aqueous phase addition, you get bimodal particle size distributions. PDI jumps to 0.38. Encapsulation efficiency drops 15–20 percentage points. The batch looks fine visually. It fails DLS.
One pilot batch failed specifically because the production team used a different grade of cetyl palmitate — same supplier, different lot, slightly different melting point. That 3°C difference in melting point was enough to change the crystallization kinetics during cooling. We now require Certificate of Analysis review for every lipid raw material lot, with melting point verification before it enters the production batch. It sounds like overkill. It isn’t.
The other failure mode we see regularly: gram-negative contamination in NLC dispersions at production scale. The aqueous phase is warm, the process takes time, and if your preservative system isn’t optimized for the nanoparticle surface chemistry, you can have adequate preservative in the bulk but insufficient free preservative at the particle interface. We had one batch — 200kg, week 8 post-challenge testing — that showed gram-negative growth despite passing the initial preservative efficacy test. The nanoparticles were sequestering the phenoxyethanol. We reformulated with a dual-preservative approach and haven’t seen it since. But it was a hard lesson.
This is usually where projects go sideways. Not the formulation. The scale-up.
Formulation Notes for Brand Partners #
What market? What are you expecting on-pack? Those are the first two questions.
If you’re targeting EU with a “nano retinol” claim, we need to know before we finalize the lipid matrix — the labeling and notification requirements under EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009 add timeline. Budget 3–4 months for the notification process if this is your first nano-ingredient SKU in the EU.
For US and APAC brands without nano-labeling concerns, the brief intake we need covers: target active and concentration, desired release profile (sustained vs. immediate), skin feel preference, packaging format, and stability claim duration. Most briefs we receive are missing at least two of these. The packaging format question is the one brands most often skip — and it’s the one that most often forces a reformulation late in the project.
Our standard NLC development timeline runs 10–14 weeks from brief confirmation to stability data package: 4 weeks formulation and optimization, 2 weeks scale-up pilot, 8 weeks accelerated stability running in parallel. If you need ICH Stability Guidelines-aligned real-time data for a dossier submission, add 12 months. Plan accordingly.
MOQ for NLC-based products typically starts at 1,000 units for finished goods, but the development investment is front-loaded. Encapsulation adds roughly 2–3× the raw material cost of the active alone. For a retinol serum at 0.3% NLC-encapsulated retinol, that’s manageable. For a multi-active NLC system with three co-encapsulated ingredients, the COGS impact is significant and needs to be in the brief conversation from day one.
What to include in your brief:
- Target active(s), concentration, and purity specification
- Regulatory destination market(s) and any known nano-labeling constraints
- Desired release profile: sustained overnight delivery vs. immediate bioavailability
- Skin feel and texture target (lightweight serum, rich cream, etc.)
- Final packaging format (airless pump, tube, jar — this affects stability planning)
- Shelf life claim and stability standard required (ICH, EU, NMPA)
- COGS ceiling or target retail price point (this determines whether encapsulation is viable)
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q: We want to put “NLC-encapsulated retinol 0.5%” on pack — is 0.5% actually stable in an NLC system?
At 0.5% retinol in NLC, you’re at the upper edge of what we’d consider routine. We’ve achieved it, but the lipid matrix needs to be optimized specifically for that load — typically a higher solid lipid fraction, around 75–80%. At that concentration, expect EE% around 80–84% and plan for 6-month accelerated stability before you commit to the claim.
Q: What’s the minimum particle size we should be targeting, and does smaller always mean better penetration?
Not always. Below 100 nm, you start getting into regulatory scrutiny territory in the EU — nanomaterial notification thresholds apply. Our standard NLC target is 150–250 nm, which gives good skin penetration via follicular and intercellular routes without triggering nano-labeling in most markets. Smaller isn’t automatically better; it’s a regulatory and stability trade-off.
Q: Can we use NLC for a water-soluble active like niacinamide?
Short answer: we’d talk you out of it. Niacinamide is hydrophilic and doesn’t partition well into a lipid matrix. Encapsulation efficiency would be low — typically under 40% in our experience — and the cost premium isn’t justified. For niacinamide delivery, polymer microspheres or simple optimized emulsion systems perform better and cost less.
Q: How do SLN and NLC affect the sensory profile of a finished formula?
SLN dispersions tend to feel lighter and less occlusive — the solid particle doesn’t spread the same way a liquid lipid does. NLC dispersions have a slightly richer, more emollient feel because of the liquid lipid component. At typical use levels of 5–15% nanoparticle dispersion in a finished formula, the sensory difference is noticeable but not dramatic. We always run consumer panel sensory testing at the prototype stage.
Q: What’s the realistic development timeline and cost for an NLC-based serum?
Development runs 10–14 weeks to stability data package. Finished goods MOQ typically starts at 1,000 units. The encapsulation step adds roughly 2–3× the cost of the raw active alone. For a 30ml serum at MOQ 1,000, expect the NLC encapsulation to add $0.80–$1.50 per unit to COGS depending on active type and load. That’s before packaging.
Have a product concept in mind? Contact our formulation team to request a complimentary brief review.
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