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Pesticide Formulations and Adjuvants

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Pesticide Formulations and Adjuvants Montana State University Pesticide Safety Education Program What is a formulation? How a pesticide is packaged. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pesticide Formulations and Adjuvants


1
Pesticide Formulations and Adjuvants
  • Montana State University
  • Pesticide Safety Education Program

2
What is a formulation?
  • How a pesticide is packaged.
  • Contains
  • Active Ingredient
  • Inert Ingredient

3
Active Ingredients
  • Has the pesticidal effect
  • Its on the label
  • Properties of the a.i. influences the type of
  • formulation

4
Inert Ingredients
  • Inactive
  • ingredients mixed with a.i. To make
  • formulation easier to handle or store.
  • Toxic or non-toxic

5
Can you get the same reaction from the same
active ingredients regardless of inert
ingredients?
  • NO, Inert Ingredients are often patented and are
    only known to the company.
  • Many times this is the difference between a
    product working effectively and not at all.
  • BANDED, SEED, FOLIAR applications all different
    yet the same!

6
Types of Formulations
  • Wet
  • More easily absorbed
  • Dry
  • More easily inhaled

7
Liquid Formulations (Wet)
  • EC emulsifiable concentrate
  • S soluble
  • M or ME Micro-Encapsulated
  • ULV ultra low volume

8
Soluble
  • Advantage
  • ? Will not separate or settle out when mixed with
    water.
  • ? Not as harmful to non-target plants
  • and animals
  • Disadvantage
  • Not many disadvantages.
  • Readily absorbs into skin

9
Emulsified Concentrates
  • ADVANTAGES
  • ? Little agitation required. Wont settle out
    when equipment is turned off.
  • ? Relatively non-abrasive.
  • ? Easy to handle, store and transport
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • Because of the solvents and emulsifiers, ECs
    are a hazard
  • to non-target plants and animals.
  • Easily absorbed through skin of plants and
    humans.
  • Solvents may cause rubber or plastic hoses
    gaskets to
  • deteriorate.

10
Dry Formulations
  • WP Wettable powder
  • F or DF Dry Flowable
  • WDG Water Dispersible Granule
  • D -Dust
  • P or G Pellets or Granules

11
Wettable Powders
  • ADVANTAGES
  • ? Easy to store transport. Smaller packaging.
    Wont
  • freeze.
  • ? Less inert ingredients in formulation.
  • ? Lower toxicity to plants than liquid
    formulations.
  • The inert ingredients, clay or talc, are
    generally harmless to
  • plants
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • Inhalation hazard when pouring and mixing. Its
    dry!
  • Needs vigorous constant agitation in the spray
    tank.
  • Abrasive to many pumps and nozzles.

12
Flowable
  • ADVANTAGES
  • ? Easy to handle and apply
  • ? Seldom clogs nozzles. Finer ground carrier.
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • May leave visible residue.
  • Requires agitation

13
Granules or Pellets
  • ADVANTAGES
  • ? Ready to Use (RTU) no mixing
  • ? Low drift hazard as particles settle quickly.
  • ? In most cases, dont need to mix with water
    first.
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • May need to be incorporated into the soil.
  • Dust from application equipment might present
    hazard to applicator.
  • Easy to over apply

14
Effects of Different Formulations
  • Formulations Hazards Phytox Equipment Agitate Comp
    actable
  • M or ME Dermal Safe ok Yes Fair
  • G or P Inhale Safe NA NA NA
  • D Inhale Safe NA NA NA
  • S Dermal Safe Non-abrasive No Fair
  • F or FL Dermal Maybe abrasive Yes Fair
  • EC Dermal Maybe Seals, gaskets No Fair
  • WP Inhale Safe abrasive Yes High

15
Testing Compatibility Using 1 qt jar
  • Wear your PPE!
  • Add to jar in same proportions as you use in the
    field ( 1
  • teaspoon 1 quart of pesticide added to 50
    gallons of water).
  • Add half of diluent to jar then add pesticide
    according to
  • plan.
  • Add Wettable other powders Water-dispersible
    granules
  • Agitate and add remaining diluent
  • Add the Liquid products, such as solutions,
    surfactants and
  • flowables.
  • Add Emulsifiable concentrates last.
  • Shake jar vigorously and feel sides of jar for
    heat. Check for
  • lumps, scum and clumps

16
continued
  • Let the jar sit for 5 minutes.
  • Check for any flakes, sludge, gels or other
  • precipitants.
  • Also see if there is any separation or layering,
    or
  • small oil particles in solution.
  • If separate layers are formed after sitting up to
    30
  • minutes but can be resuspended by shaking,
  • application may be possible but make sure you
  • have agitation in the sprayer.
  • If there is layering, an emulsifiable concentrate
  • will normally go to the top. Wettable powders
    will
  • either settle to the bottom or float on top.

17
Interaction problems with combining Formulations
  • Additive effects
  • Synergistic responses
  • Antagonism
  • Enhancement

18
Additive Effect
  • SAVES TIME WITH NO CHANGE IN EFFECT!
  • Ease of mixing
  • Reduces of field passes
  • Example root absorbed herbicide with a
  • foliar absorbed or Tordon with Escort

19
Synergistic Response
  • Confused with Additive effects
  • Greater response when mixed.
  • True interaction between chemicals
  • Reduced rates often the result

20
Antagonism
  • Less control when 2 or more chemicals are mixed
  • May also increase phytotoxicity
  • Example mixing of some grass and
  • broadleaf herbicides (Diclofop and 2,4-D)

21
Enhancement
  • When a pesticide is mixed with an additive
  • to provide greater response.
  • Example adjuvants

22
Adjuvants
  • Additives that are added to a spray solution in
    order to enhance or modify the performance of the
    spray mixture.
  • 1 - Surfactants/wetting agents
  • 2 - Oils
  • 3 - Fertilizers
  • 4 - Utility

23
1 - Surfactants
  • A broad category of adjuvants that facilitate and
    enhance the absorbing, emulsifying, dispersing,
    spreading, sticking, wetting and penetrating
    properties of pesticides.
  • Some pesticides like Roundup Pro already have
    surfactants added. (14.5 )

24
Why Surfactants
  • Because of the high surface tension of water,
    spray mixture droplets maintain their roundness
    and can sit on the leaf hairs or leaf surface
    without much of the mixture actually contacting
    the leaf.
  • Surfactants reduce angle and promote more
    absorption

25
Classes of Surfactants/Wetting Agents
  • 1a - Nonionic Surfactants (no charge)
  • Reduces surface tension
  • Improves spreading, sticking and herbicide uptake
  • All purpose
  • 1b - Silicone compounds (Silicone based)
  • More reduction in surface tension.
  • Spread more than conventional surfactants
  • Maximum rainfastness due to increased absorption.
  • Can usually use at lower rates

26
2 - Oils
  • Crop Oil Concentrates (COC)
  • Blend of paraffin based petroleum oil and
    surfactants
  • Used primarily with grass herbicides
  • Esterified Seed Oils (ESO) often referred as MSO
  • Produced by reacting fatty acids from seed
    oils(corn, soybean, canola) with an alcohol to
    form an ester
  • All purpose type of surfactant

27
3 - Fertilizers -(Nitrogen-surfactant Blends)
  • Improves herbicide uptake with hard to-kill weeds
  • Neutralizes or gives hard water mineral ions
    something to bind to instead of the herbicide.
  • Used primarily with broadleaf herbicides.

28
4 - Utility
  • Acidifiers -neutralize alkaline solutions lower
    pH.
  • Buffering agents -stabilize the pH of spray
    solutions.
  • Anti-foaming agents
  • Compatibility agents
  • Drift control agents
  • Emulsification aids
  • Suspension aids -added to a suspension in order
    to keep pesticide particles dispersed or to
    resuspend particles.

29
Tips continued
  • Costs
  • Generally, non-ionic surfactants and crop oil
    concentrates are the least expensive
  • Nitrogen surfactants, esterified crop oils,
    organosilicones (most expensive)
  • What conditions follow an application?
  • Max rainfastness esterified seed oils,
    organo-silicones, nitrogen surfactants
  • Not all surfactants have the same amount of
    rainfastness

30
What formulation is this?
  • FLOWABLE
  • DERMAL ABSORPTION

Examples Bravo 720 F fungicide Furadan 4 F
insecticide
31
Question 2What formulation is this?
  • Powdered Hand Soap
  • Wettable Powder
  • Easily Inhaled

Examples Sevin 50 W insecticide Kerb 50 W
herbicide Sniper 50 W insecticide
32
READ THE LABEL
  • This will give you an idea of what type of
    adjuvant if any should be used.
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