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Fine pesticides

Sprays. Aerosol spray emulsions are of the water-in-oil type. The preferred propellant is a hydrocarbon or mixed hydrocarbon—hydrofluorocarbon. About 25 to 30% propellent, miscible with the oil, remains in the external phase of the emulsion. When this system is dispensed, the propellant vaporizes, leaving behind droplets of the w/o emulsion (Fig. 2b). A vapor tap valve, which tends to produce finely dispersed particles, is employed. Because the propellant and the product concentrate tend to separate on standing, products formulated using this system, such as pesticides and room deodorants, must be shaken before use. [Pg.346]

There are also companies that concentrate on physical operations in connection with fine chemicals manufacturing. Activities include dmg and pesticide formulation, distillation, and milling/sieving/drying. [Pg.441]

Not many fine chemicals have a production value exceeding 10 million per year. Less than a do2en achieve production volumes above 10,000 metric tons per year and sales of > 100 million per year. Apart from the pharmaceutical and pesticide fine chemicals these comprise the amino acids (qv), L-lysine and n,T-methionine used as feed additives (see Feeds AND FEED ADDITIVES), and vitamins ascorbic acid and nicotinic acid. [Pg.442]

Clays composed of attapulgite, montmorillonite, and kaoHnite are used for pesticides in finely pulverized or granular form. Granular formulations are reportedly less expensive, more easily handled, reduce loss caused by wind drift, and produce a more effective coverage. [Pg.210]

Applicability This process is applicable to liquid (pumpable) organic wastes and finely divided, fluidizable sludges. It may be particularly applicable to the processing of liquid wastes with a high chlorine, pesticide, PCB or dioxin content. Sludges must be capable of being fluidized by the addition of a liquid. Waste streams must be free of (or preprocessed to remove) solids, which prevent satisfactory atomization. [Pg.160]

One problem that has arisen with the use of herbicides in agriculture is spray or vapor drift. When fine spray droplets are released, especially if applied aerially, they may be deposited beyond the target area due to air movements to cause damage there. In the first place, this is a question of application technique. Herbicides, like other pesticides, should not be applied as sprays under windy conditions. In most... [Pg.260]

N-Nitroso contamination in pesticide products was first reported by D. Fine and co-workers (] ) who had developed a novel and specific analytical method for N-nitroso compounds, called thermal energy analysis. [Pg.384]

Similarly, low volume chemicals are classified according to whether they are sold primarily on the basis of specification or performance. Specialties are generally formulations that are sold on the basis of their performance and their prices reflect their value rather than cost of production. Producers of specialty chemicals often provide extensive technical service to their customers. Examples of specialty chemicals include pharmaceuticals, pesticides, flavours and fragrances, specialty polymers, etc. Fine chemicals, on the other hand, are produced to customer specifications and are often intermediates or active ingredients for specialty chemicals, e.g. pharmaceutical and agrochemical intermediates and bulk actives. [Pg.15]

Microbial activity can also be stimulated by mineral colloids through their ability to sorb metabolites that would otherwise have an adverse effect on microbial growth (Filip et al. 1972 Filip and Hattori 1984) This may be due to the toxicity of metabolites, and their feed back repression and, encouraging competitors. Predictably, montmorillonite (CEC —100 cmol kg-1 and specific surface of 800 m g 1) is more effective than kaolinite and finely ground quarts. Other substances, such as antibiotics and pesticides that are toxic to some microorganisms, can also be adsorbed by the surfaces of mineral colloids (Theng and Orchard 1995 Dec et al. 2002). [Pg.18]

Sonication helps improve solid-liquid extractions. Usually a finely ground sample is covered with solvent and placed in an ultrasonic bath. The ultrasonic action facilitates dissolution, and the heating aids the extraction. There are many EPA methods for solids such as soils and sludges that use sonication for extraction. The type of solvent used is determined by the nature of the analytes. This technique is still in widespread use because of its simplicity and good extraction efficiency. For example, in research to determine the amount of pesticide in air after application to rice paddy systems, air samples collected on PUF were extracted by sonication, using acetone as the solvent. The extraction recoveries were between 92% and 103% [21]. [Pg.35]

Regulation increases other costs. Environmental violations arising from waste disposal, asbestos, or other hazards at production facilities have become an increasing fact of life for formulator firms. Scotts Company recently paid fines and cleanup costs for unlicensed waste disposal and asbestos contamination at several sites in the U.K. and Ohio. Federal, state, and local environmental regulators strictly regulate waste disposal from fertilizer- and pesticide-formulating plants. Companies also must be prepared for the potential costs of remediation or liability if any pesticide causes harm. ... [Pg.89]

Williams, Fred O. (1999). TrueGreen to pay 600,000 fine for violating pesticide laws. Buffalo News. Buffalo, NY, July 27 6D. [Pg.168]

An abandoned orchard (Farm C) which had not received any pesticide applications for three years was used as a control (Elnora loamy fine sand). [Pg.119]

It is entirely fitting that we dedicate this book on the discovery of new pesticides to the memory of this brilliant young scientist a fine gentleman, a man of sterling qualities, an inspiring colleague, and a friend to many of us. [Pg.3]

The BioTrol soil washing system is a patented, water-based volume reduction process used to treat excavated soil. It separates slightly contaminated, coarse, washed soil particles from heavily contaminated fine soil particles. The process operates on the premise that (1) contaminants tend to be concentrated in the fine size fraction of soil (sUt, clay, and soil organic matter) and (2) contaminants associated with the coarse soil fraction (sand and gravel) are primarily surficial. The BioTrol soil washing system can be used to treat soils contaminated with petroleum hydrocarbons, pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), various industrial chemicals, and metals. [Pg.416]


See other pages where Fine pesticides is mentioned: [Pg.436]    [Pg.441]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.1860]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.795]    [Pg.819]    [Pg.400]    [Pg.638]    [Pg.740]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.513]    [Pg.393]    [Pg.395]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.267]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.506 , Pg.507 ]




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