1 / 18

Where do current agro trends come from and what is the future trends

Bedre formuleringer af planteværnsmidler Anita Wengel Manager Formulation Development Cheminova A/S. Where do current agro trends come from and what is the future trends. Soluble actives into SL in Water or in EC with petroleum-based solvents

duman
Télécharger la présentation

Where do current agro trends come from and what is the future trends

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. Bedre formuleringer af planteværnsmidlerAnita WengelManagerFormulation DevelopmentCheminova A/S

  2. Where do current agro trends come from and what is the future trends • Soluble actives into SL in Water or in EC with petroleum-based solvents • If not suitable for ECs or SL, then WP with higher concentrations But • Increased exposure for the users, toxicological concerns, protection of the environment, stricter regulations, Inerts lists are all drivers for SC, WG and SE emergens in the 80´s and the 90´s and granules, tablets, gels, microcapsules and nanocapsules in 2000´s

  3. What does it mean for us? • Minimal contact with products • More accurate placement of the a.i. • Use of safer formulations, e.g. waterbased suspensions, emulsions, microcapsules and water dispersible granules • Maximisation of biology effectiveness • Use of safer adjuvants (built-in or tankmix) • Choice for formulation might be restricted

  4. Extended role of the formulator • Optimization of manufacturing processes • Convenience for the user • Reduction dose rate of applied pesticide • Better targetting of pesticide to pest – controled placement and release rate • Use less toxic formulation additives • Reduction of waste • Compeditive edge • Life cycle extension of current a.i.s

  5. Identified global trends • Multi-active ingredient formulations with built-in adjuvants – regional differentiation too • Reformulation of ECs as solvent-free liquid formulations or dry formulations: from EC to EW, ME, SE, WG • Dry formulations – the rising stars - From traditionnal SLs to GRs with higher concentrations a.i - Higher concentrations SCs, WGs,… • New type of formulations, e.g.multiple emulsions, nanoemulsions and capsule suspensions

  6. Multi-active ingredient formulations • Combination of several herbicides or fungicide/herbicide • Combination of glyphosate with nutrients in dry formulations: in early stages • Compatibility challenge in higher loading formulations – need of excellent compatibility agents • Different type of built-in-adjuvant in dry formulations

  7. Reformulation of ECs as ECs • Focus on above 50% active ingredient • Solvent replacement with vegetable oil, while securing emulsion stability during storage and compatibility with vegetable oils – need of new emulsifying systems • High flash, low volatile, low odor, low visquous emulsifying system – improved handling properties

  8. Reformulation of ECs as EWs, MEs, SCs,WDGs and CS’s • To get rid of flammable, petroleum-based solvent • EW: first attemp to replace flammable solvents • ME: more sofisticate EW, but higher cost due to higher surfactant concentration

  9. Concentrated Emulsions - EWs • EW is a stable concentrated oil-in-water emulsion, it’s a new water based formulation to replace EC. • Avantages of EW.(compared with EC) - less solvent or no solvent in formulation - safer in transport and storage - reduced phytotoxicity level - lower cost - more environmental friendly

  10. Microemulsions - ME • A micro-emulsiom is a thermodynamically stable phase which contains at least three components, namely: a.i., water and surfactants. Often a cosurfactant is needed • Typical characteristics: - Droplet size < 1µm - Clear or translucent liquid - Thermodynamic stability

  11. ME – Advantages and Disadvantages • Advantages - Long shelf life and good storage stability - Good application properties - Pack and equipment easy to clean - Low flammability - Bioenhancement – better uptake of a.i. • Disadvantages - Low a.i. content (below 30%) - High surfactant content = high cost - Limited suitable surfactant systems - So far, niche marked

  12. Dry formulations – The rising stars • From EC and WP to WG: worldwide trend • More and more actives to be formulated as WG – higher a.i. content • Resulting benefits offset higher production cost • Marked demand for faster wetting, better granular breakdown, floculation reduction leads to improved dispersant/wetter system

  13. WDG – Advantages and Disadvantages • Advantages - Easy to pour and measure, ”flowables” - Essentially non-dusty - Good dispersion/solution in water Good stability at high and low temperature • Disadvantages - High initial expenditure plant - Possible higher production costs per kg - Product quality sensitive to process and raw material variations (origins)

  14. CS – Capsule suspensions • Opportunity for controlled/delayed/triggered release of a.i.’s – improved selectivity • Cuts down volatility – reduced pesticide loss • Reduced toxicity/odour/safer handling • Overcomes physical compatibility issues in formulation and spray tank • Gives UV protection to a.i. • For water insoluble a.i.’s usually formulated as EC

  15. 02-3 SEM picture of microcapsules

  16. SEM Picture

  17. Other indicators of future trends • Nanoemulsions - Droplet size 100 to 200 nanometers vs 1 to 10 microns today - Much longer storage stability and higher bioefficacy • Multiple emulsions: W/OW - Controlled release of water or oil soluble pesticides - Polymeris surfactant to achieve adequate stability

  18. Conclusions • Fewer and fewer new molecules • Maximisation of existing ones • Product differentation by formulation type, package delivery systems and target specific delivery of pesticides • More complex formulations, more safe formulations and mixture formulations will make progress

More Related