1 / 25

Adjuvants

Adjuvants. An overview of the adjuvants in use in Region 8. Adjuvants. Any material added to a pesticide mixture to modify its behavior; includes wetting agents, spreader stickers, other surfactants, penetrants, and drift control agents. Adjuvants – some definitions. Polar vs. non-polar

clayton
Download Presentation

Adjuvants

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Adjuvants An overview of the adjuvants in use in Region 8

  2. Adjuvants Any material added to a pesticide mixture to modify its behavior; includes wetting agents, spreader stickers, other surfactants, penetrants, and drift control agents

  3. Adjuvants – some definitions Polar vs. non-polar Polar compounds are compounds which have, due to their structure, have a definite imbalance in charge – resulting in a positive and a negatively charged end - + Polar bear?

  4. Adjuvants – some definitions Polar vs. non-polar Non-polar compounds are compounds which have evenly distributed charge throughout their molecules

  5. Adjuvants – some definitions R + - Polar Non-polar

  6. Adjuvants – some definitions Polar vs. non-polar Polarity in a chemical aids in spreading the chemical over a polar surface or in penetrating one

  7. Adjuvants – some definitions Ionic vs. non-ionic In solution ionic molecules separate into positively and negatively charged subparts (ions) while non-ionic molecules do not

  8. Adjuvants – some definitions Ionic vs. non-ionic R + - Ions from an ionic compound Non-ionic molecule

  9. Adjuvants – some definitions Ionic vs. non-ionic Ions from an ionic compound can interfere with the activity of a polar or an ionic pesticide while non-ionic compounds do not

  10. Adjuvants

  11. Surfactant Any material added to a pesticide formulation which is designed to modify the surface characteristics of the target organism

  12. Surfactants

  13. Wetting Agent Any material added to a pesticide mixture which serves to make the surface “wetter” so as to allow more rapid spread of the pesticide on the target – often called a ‘spreader’ Without wetting agent With a wetting agent

  14. Wetting agents

  15. Penetrant Any material which modifies the target surface in a way which allows more rapid penetration of the surface of the organism by the pesticidal formulation

  16. Penetrants Napthenic oil Mineral oil Diesel oil

  17. Penetrants Organic silicone Vegetable oil

  18. Penetrants Products designed to create invert emulsions (oil in water)

  19. Spreader Any material added to a pesticide formulation which improves the formulations ability to rapidly form a film on the target surface – generally interchanged with “wetting agent”

  20. Sticker Any material added to a formulated pesticide which improves the ability of the pesticide to adhere to the target surface

  21. Stickers

  22. Drift Control Agent Materials added to a mixture to increase the size of droplets and decrease the tendency of the pesticide to drift off-target

  23. Drift control agents

  24. Materials added to a formulation which marks a treated stem so that later identification of those treated vs. not treated is simplified • Dyes in either amine or ester formulations are the most common pattern indicators

  25. Pattern indicators

More Related