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These days, the airport needs to be practically focused on the expert level. Should I take off my shoes? Laptop inside or out? What about these batteries? And when it comes to liquids, you should know, they are getting nothing more than 3.4 ounces … or is it? In the past few months, a social media trend has emerged, passengers are proud of how they freeze them before going to the airport and presented TSA agents with their beauty products.
“I really, I really hope it works because I like this cleansing balm,” Tctkar shared Fiona before putting her frozen Elimeus balm through a belt. After a moment, Fiona gave remarks, “I can’t believe it worked.”
He even repeated the experience with the same results with a shampoo bottle.
And really, social media stars like Fiona are not wrong. As the TSA’s website explains, “As long as it is offered for screening, it is allowed frozen liquid items through the checkpoint until they are solid.” However, it importantly noted, “If frozen liquid items are partially melted, raw, or any liquid under the container, they must meet the requirements of 3-1 liquids.”
So, yes, you can technically do it, but should you?
“From my point of view, as a dermatologist, it is usually a bad idea to freeze most of the scanner products,” Dr. Hannah Copalman, who completed two clinical fellowships in dermatology from the University of Boston, and said skin cancer from Boston University. Travel + leisure. “Active ingredients in the scanner – such as retinol, vitamin C, peptides, and even sunscreen are highly sensitive to temperature temperature changes.”
Dr. Hannah Copalman
“I wouldn’t recommend to freeze the scanner as usual-it is more secure to stay on the version of the saffron or to transfer your product to TSA-approved containers so that the formula remains stable and efficient.”
– Dr. Hannah Copalman
Copeman explained that when you freeze them, the formula “may be separated or harassed, which means that when you apply it later, its product will not be so effective. Freezing can also change the structure, which can also affect the creams or even the serum water.”
Melania Abeta, an aesthetic nurse practitioner and the center of harmony aesthetics in Los Angeles, agreed that “cream, serum, and emulsions can lose stability after its structure, utility or frozen … additional, repeatedly frozen and melting and melting.”
However, if you are trying to get some products through TSA, not all hope is lost. According to Dr. Louis Kim, a cosmetic chemist, some products can sometimes cope with the frozen “, usually those who are mostly solid or analodrosis (water -free), such as some oil hair, solid cleansers, or wax -based products.” According to less, these products do not make ice crystals because “they do not have water, and that means they are low risk of frozen and melting.”
Copelman added that some products, such as petroleum jelly, can usually cope with the frozen melt cycle without losing their integrity. He noted, “Sheet masks, if they are just wet in a hydrating essence, they often do well.” “That said, I would not recommend freezing the usual scanner-it is more secure to stay on the version of the travel size or transfer your product to TSA-approved containers so that the formula remains stable and efficient.”
Kim also supported freezing suggestions, “Although frozen cannot be eliminated by the frozen formulations, it is possible that their structure may change. Some natural oils, such as butter and coconut oil, when cooling and melting, have a bad antioxidant.”
Kim said, “The safest approach is to use Mines or move to TSA -approved containers instead of relying on freezing your product.”