Pesticide Formulations - Chapter 3
Pesticide Formulations - Chapter 3
Pesticide Formulations - Chapter 3
Pesticide products sold as concentrates must be mixed with water, or some other carrier, before being applied. The amount of active
ingredient (a.i.) and the kind of formulation may be listed on the product label.
Concentrated formulations are very economical when treating large areas but it may be hard to measure amounts needed for small areas.
Also, the handling, mixing, need for specialized spray equipment, and clean-up time may make the use of concentrates inconvenient or
impractical.
Ready-to-Use formulations may be more appropriate for small areas. They contain small amounts of active ingredient (often 1% or less a.i.
per unit volume). Some contain petroleum-based solvents; others are water-based. RTU formulations are already diluted and may be sold in
containers that serve as applicators. Example RTU formulations include aerosols (A), granules (G), and most baits (B).
Most pesticide formulations are liquid or dry materials. Some pesticides are available in more than one. Cost is always a consideration
but safety and pest management concerns should come first. Choose the formulation best suited for the job based on:
Can the formulation be applied appropriately under the conditions in the application area?
Will the formulation reach the intended target and stay in place?
The three main types of liquid formulations are solutions, suspensions, and emulsions:
A solution is made by dissolving a substance in a liquid. A true solution is a mixture that cannot be separated by a filter or other mechanical
means. Normally, it will not separate or “settle out” into distinct parts after being mixed. Light can penetrate most solutions.
A suspension is an even mixture of very small solid particles throughout a liquid. A suspension that has been on a shelf for some time must
be shaken well to mix the liquid and solid portions evenly before pouring it into the spray tank. Water is added to make a finished spray.
There must be enough agitation to keep the product evenly distributed in the spray tank during application. Most suspensions are cloudy or
opaque; light cannot pass through them.
An emulsion is a mixture of droplets of one liquid in another liquid. Each ingredient keeps its unique properties and identity.
In an emulsion, the active ingredient is dissolved in an oil-based solvent. An emulsifier allows the active ingredient and the solvent to mix
evenly with water before application. Some agitation may be necessary to keep an emulsion from separating. As a rule, emulsions have a
“milky” appearance.
Common Liquid Formulations
EC formulations usually contain an oil-soluble liquid active ingredient, a petroleum-based solvent, and an emulsifier (mixing agent). The
emulsifier allows the active ingredient in the solvent to mix with water, these form an emulsion. ECs are versatile formulations that can be
applied with many types of sprayers.
Some microencapsulated pesticide products contain highly toxic materials with coatings to
increase handler safety. Others are microencapsulated to reduce staining or odor or to
protect the active ingredient from breakdown by sunlight.Microencapsulated insecticides
may be very hazardous to bees if the particles do not break down quickly and are the same size as pollen grains.Foraging bees may
collect them and carry them back to the hive. Later, when the coatings break down and release the pesticide, the colony may be poisoned.
Some microencapsulated soil-applied products may be more prone to leaching into groundwater.
Ready-to-use (RTU) aerosol formulations are usually small, self-contained units that release pesticide when the nozzle valve is
triggered. An inert pressurized gas pushes the pesticide through a fine opening when the gas is released, creating fine droplets.
These products are effective in greenhouses, in small areas inside buildings, or in localized outdoor areas. Commercial models,
which hold 5 to 10 pounds of pesticide, are usually refillable.
Smoke or Fog Generator formulations are used in machines that use a rapidly whirling disk or heated surface to produce and
distribute very fine droplets. These formulations are used mainly for insect control in structures such as greenhouses, barns, and
warehouses and for outdoor mosquito and biting fly control. Both provide easy ways to treat confined spaces but have high
inhalation hazards and aerosols have a high risk of fire/explosion.
Dry Formulations
The active ingredient is on the surface of a solid carrier, such as talc, clay, or ground corncobs.
Granules (G)
Granules are ready-to-use formulations. The active ingredient either coats the outside of the
granules or is absorbed into small particles of clay, talc, or similar carrier. The amount of
active ingredient is relatively low, usually ranging from less than 1% to 15%. The carriers in
many granular formulations absorb moisture so humidity affects their flow rate during
application. Also, different “batches” of the same formulation may differ slightly in size or
shape and density. Therefore, it is important to calibrate granular application devices often.
After application, the active ingredient is slowly released. Rainfall or watering usually is
needed to activate the product. Granular formulations are mostly used to apply chemicals to
the soil to control weeds, nematodes, or soil insects. Granular formulations are used to
deliver systemic pesticides which are taken up by plant roots. They also are used in aquatic
situations to control mosquito larvae and aquatic weeds.
Wettable powders are effective for most pest problems and in most types of spray equipment where agitation is possible. They have
excellent residual activity and usually do not harm treated surfaces. When you apply a WP spray suspension to a target, most of the
pesticide remains on the surface. This is true even for porous materials, such as concrete, plaster, and untreated wood. In such cases, only the
water carrier penetrates the porous material. Wettable powder particles remain on the treated surface.
These are WP formulations that have been compressed into dust-free, granule-sized particles.
Most come with product-specific measuring devices. The dry ounce (or pound) increment marks on them are based on product density
(weight per unit volume).These formulations readily pour out of their containers and are are easier to measure and cleaner to handle than
WPs. They too are mixed with water and applied as a spray suspension. Once in water and agitated, the granules break apart into fine
powder. The label may contain specific instructions to make mixing more effective. These formulations require constant agitation to keep
them suspended in water.
WDGs share the advantages and disadvantages of WPs. However, WDGs have one added benefit: reduced handler exposure risk. A label for
an 80 WDG indicates that this dry product contains 80% by weight of active ingredient and is formulated as a water-dispersible granule.
An increasing number of pesticide products are available in water-soluble bags (WSBs). A special film packages a precise amount of wettable
powder, soluble powder, or gel containing the pesticide active ingredient(s). When added to water in a spray tank, the bag dissolves and
releases the contents that then are suspended or dissolved. This packaging method reduces handler exposure risk. It also simplifies
measuring.
Water-soluble packaging will not dissolve in organicsolvents or undiluted ECs. As a result, mixers and loaders must follow label instructions
when preparing a spray mixture. Store water-soluble products in a dry place, and do not handle them with damp or wet gloves. Packets
contain amounts of pesticide for specific spray volumes, such as 100 gallons of water.
Baits (B)
These are RTU formulations containing an active ingredient mixed with food or another attractive substance. The bait either attracts the
pests or is placed where the pests will find it. Application may require specialized equipment and treatment costs may be too great for
problems such as slug control in no-till corn or soybeans.
In a tank mixture, observe all restrictions, directions for use, crop/sites, use rates, dilution ratios, precautions and limitations that appear
on the tank mix product label.
*****
Do not exceed labeled dosage rate and follow the most restrictive label precautions and limitations. This product must not be mixed
with any product that prohibits such mixing.
*****
Tank mixtures or other applications of products referenced on this label are permitted only in those states in which the referenced
products and uses are registered.
physical - they gel, curdle, foam, or stay in separate layers when mixed.
chemical - their pest control activity changes when they are mixed.
Antagonism and synergism are the main types of chemical incompatibility. Antagonism occurs when the pest control effectiveness of one
or both mixed products is reduced. Synergism occurs when mixing increases the activity of one or more products. This can produce more
effective pest control in some cases but in other cases, the result can be crop damage.
Additives / Adjuvants
Additives / adjuvants are chemicals that may improve the action of a pesticide OR change the characteristics of a pesticide formulation
or a spray mixture. Before using any adjuvant, consult the pesticide product label. Some products have very specific recommendations or
prohibitions for adjuvants. If a label instructs you to use an adjuvant, use the type called for at the directed rate. Many products already
contain those adjuvants that the manufacturer or formulator feels are necessary or useful. Adding others may actually decrease efficacy or
result in unintended and possibly undesirable effects.
Adjuvants alone have no pesticidal activity so the EPA does not register them. As a result, there are no standards for composition, quality, or
performance. Contact the manufacturer if you have questions about an adjuvant.
Types of Adjuvants
Antifoaming (defoaming) agent reduces excessive foaming of spray mixtures that may result from using some surfactants and/or from
vigorous agitation.
Buffer or pH modifier allows pesticides to mix with diluents or other pesticides of different acidities or alkalinities. A buffer should be
added first and mixed well. The water must be pH neutral or slightly acidic before adding pesticides or other adjuvants.
Compatibility agent helps to combine pesticides (or pesticides and fertilizers) effectively; they can reduce or eliminate mixing problems.
Dift control additive (deposition aid) increases average droplet size and/or lower the number of “fines” (very small droplets) produced.
Extender or sticker keeps pesticides active on a target for an extended period or on waxy foliage.
Plant penetrant allows pesticides to entered treated foliage. Certain plant penetrants may increase movement into leaves of some but not all
plant species.
Safener reduces the toxicity of a pesticide formulation to the pesticide handler or to the treated surface.
Sticker allows pesticides to stay on a treated surface longer. Some stickers help to hold solid particles to treated surfaces. This reduces the
amount that washes off due to rain or irrigation. Others reduce evaporation and/or slow breakdown by sunlight.
Thickener increases viscosity (thickness) of spray mixtures. They may reduce drift and/or slow evaporation.
Surfactants are commonly used as adjuvants to alter the dispersal, spreading, and wetting properties of spray droplets. These products
physically change the surface tension of a spray droplet. In order to perform well, some pesticide sprays must be able to wet treated foliage
thoroughly and evenly. Surfactants that reduce surface tension enable droplets to spread out instead of “beading up”. This results in better
coverage and increases the odds that the pest will contact the pesticide. Surfactants are particularly helpful when treating plants with waxy
or hairy leaves.
Surfactants are classified by how they split apart into charged atoms or molecules, called ions.
Anionic surfactants have a negative (-) charge. They are most often used with contact pesticides, which control the pest by direct
contact instead of being absorbed into it systemically.
Cationic surfactants have a positive (+) charge. Do not use them as “stand-alone” surfactants—often, they are phytotoxic.
Nonionic surfactants have no electrical charge. They are often used with systemic products to help pesticides to penetrate plant
cuticles. They are compatible with most pesticide products. A pesticide can behave very differently in the presence of an anionic,
cationic, or nonionic surfactant. For this reason, you must follow label directions when choosing one of these additives. Selecting
the wrong surfactant can reduce efficacy and damage treated plants or surfaces.
The terms used with pesticide additives can be confusing. People sometimes use the words “adjuvant” and “surfactant” interchangeably.
However, an adjuvant is ANY substance added to modify properties of a pesticide formulation or finished spray. A surfactant is a specific
kind of adjuvant—one that affects the interaction of a spray droplet and a treated surface. All surfactants are adjuvants but not all adjuvants
are surfactants. For example, drift control additives and safeners are not surfactants.
Choosing an Adjuvant
Read and follow the label. Is an adjuvant recommended? If so, what type? Do not make substitutions. Some product labels may
recommend an adjuvant for one type of use or site but prohibit any kind of adjuvant for another labeled use or site. Many end-use
formulated products already have adjuvants, and adding adjuvants “on the fly” can decrease efficacy. Suppose, for example, that
a certain product is formulated with a wetting agent. If you add another wetting agent when you mix and load a foliar-applied
spray, the product may not give better spreading and coverage. Instead, the extra adjuvant may increase runoff, reduce
deposition, and even damage the target plant.
Use only those adjuvants manufactured for agricultural or horticultural uses. Do not use industrial products or household
detergents in pesticide spray mixes.
Be skeptical of adjuvant claims such as “improves root uptake” or “keeps spray equipment clean” unless a reliable source can
provide research-based evidence to support them. Only use adjuvant products that have been tested and found effective for your
intended use.
Test spray mixes with adjuvants on a small area before proceeding with full-scale use.
Summary
The components of a formulated pesticide include both active and inert ingredients. The active ingredient controls the pest. Inert ingredients
include carriers or diluents and adjuvants. The type of formulation may be provided in the identifying information on the front panel of the
label. Learn what formulations are available for the pesticide active ingredients you will use. To decide which formulation is best for a
specific site and situation, you must know the properties—and be able to evaluate the pros and cons—of various formulation types. You
must be familiar with formulation types and active ingredient properties in order to understand the characteristics of the products you use
and apply them properly.
Most end-use pesticide products contain adjuvants. Although adjuvants themselves lack any direct pesticidal activity, they are added to
pesticide formulations to improve product performance. You should know when and how to use an adjuvant.
You must consider several factors when choosing a pesticide formulation. These include
the practicality of using a specific formulation in a particular site to control the target pest, and
Understanding the properties of common formulations before choosing a pesticide will help you avoid problems and apply your product in
an effective and efficient manner.