Silicone surfactants are increasingly used in the industrial field due to their advantages such as low surface energy, stable performance, and good biocompatibility. However, many polyether-modified silicone surfactants' foam stability and easy hydrolysis in non-neutral aqueous systems limit their application in many fields. In this article, the decynediol-ethoxylate chain segment was grafted onto heptamethyltrisiloxane to synthesize a modified trisiloxane surfactant (G2). FT-IR and 1H NMR characterized its structure. Its surface activity, aggregation behavior, and wetting and spreading properties in water were studied by using instruments such as a surface tension meter, transmission electron microscope (TEM), dynamic light scattering (DLS), and contact angle tester. G2 can reduce the surface tension of water to 19.24 mN/m at a lower CMC (40.44 mg/L), and the foaming properties and hydrolysis stability of decynediol-ethoxylate-modified trisiloxane (G2) in water are significantly improved compared with allyl-polyoxyethylene-ether-modified trisiloxane (X5).