🎓 The Science of Cannabinoid Stability: Light, Oxygen, Heat & pH

🎓 The Science of Cannabinoid Stability: Light, Oxygen, Heat & pH

Introduction

Cannabinoid stability is one of the most important — and misunderstood — aspects of hemp product manufacturing. Even when starting with high-quality ingredients, factors like light, oxygen, temperature, and pH can impact:

  • Potency
  • Color
  • Flavor
  • Shelf life
  • COA results
  • Product performance

This guide breaks down the underlying chemistry and how manufacturers can build stable, long-lasting products with confidence.


🌞 1. Light (UV Exposure)

What it does:

UV light can break down cannabinoids and accelerate oxidation.

Effects:

  • CBD → breakdown into unknowns
  • THC → CBN (in THC-containing extracts)
  • Color darkening
  • Loss of terpene profile

Prevention:

  • Use amber or opaque containers
  • Avoid clear stock bottles for bulk distillates
  • Store away from direct sunlight
  • Use UV-blocking secondary packaging when needed

🌬 2. Oxygen (Oxidative Stress)

Oxygen is the most common cause of cannabinoid degradation.

Effects:

  • Oxidation of lipids in topicals
  • Terpene evaporation
  • Off-odors
  • Potency drift
  • Rancidity in oils

Prevention:

  • Nitrogen flush bulk containers
  • Use antioxidants like tocopherols
  • Ensure tight seals on jars/pouches
  • Avoid headspace in bottles during filling

🔥 3. Heat (Thermal Stress)

Cannabinoids are sensitive to extended high heat.

CBD begins degrading at: ~160–180°C

Terpenes begin evaporating at: 60–140°C

Effects:

  • Color shift
  • Bitter notes
  • Changes in viscosity
  • Potency loss

Prevention:

  • Maintain manufacturing temps below 120°F when possible
  • Avoid high-temp holding tanks
  • Fill products once cooled

⚖️ 4. pH (Acid/Base Environment)

Many manufacturers overlook how pH influences cannabinoid stability.

Stable Zone: pH 5–7

At pH below 3 or above 8:

  • Cannabinoid isomerization increases
  • Terpenes degrade
  • Color darkens
  • Nanoemulsions destabilize

Control Methods:

  • Use citrates to stabilize pH
  • Test pH during formulation
  • Buffer beverages and topicals

5. Packaging’s Role in Stability

Best-in-class packaging includes:

  • Multi-layer barrier films
  • Amber glass
  • Airless pumps for cosmetics
  • Foil-lined pouches
  • Heat-sealed moisture barriers

6. Conducting Proper Stability Studies

To validate shelf life:

Test at:

  • 25°C / 60% RH (real time)
  • 40°C / 75% RH (accelerated aging)

Evaluate:

  • Potency
  • Microbial safety
  • Appearance
  • Texture
  • Odor
  • pH
  • Water activity (if applicable)

Document results for retailer confidence.


Final Thoughts

When manufacturers understand cannabinoid stability, they build products that perform consistently, retain potency, and maintain consumer trust.

With high-quality inputs and controlled processing, hemp products can achieve excellent shelf-life performance.

👉 For high-stability distillates & isolates, explore