Physical (mineral) sunscreens: how they work and why white cast happens
Physical sunscreens use inorganic particles — zinc oxide (ZnO) and titanium dioxide (TiO2) — that sit on the skin surface and physically block, scatter, and reflect UV radiation. Their advantages are immediate protection on application (no 20-minute wait), broad-spectrum UVA+UVB coverage (zinc oxide is the only single filter that covers the entire UV spectrum), photostability (do not degrade in sunlight), and extremely low irritation potential (suitable for the most sensitive and reactive skin types). The white cast problem is a physics issue: ZnO and TiO2 particles are white powders that reflect visible light in addition to UV light. On dark skin, this visible-light reflection creates a grey, ashy, or purple cast that is immediately noticeable and worsens in flash photography. Micronised and nano-particle formulations (particle size below 100nm) reduce — but do not eliminate — white cast on Fitzpatrick IV–V skin. In a 2024 quantification study, 92% of Indian women (Fitzpatrick IV–V) rated ZnO 20%+ sunscreen as having unacceptable white cast even in nano-particle formulations. Tinted physical sunscreens with iron oxide pigments solve the white cast issue and additionally block visible light (including blue/HEV light that contributes to melasma in dark skin) — but tinted formulations must match skin tone, adding a shade-matching complexity that most Indian brands have not adequately addressed.