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Showing posts with the label Fertilizers

Urea - Guide to Trigger the Growth of Fertilizers Industry in the Coming Years

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Urea is produced with a combination of carbon dioxide and ammonia. It is a highly-efficient nitrogen fertilizer used in agriculture for ground treatment and top-dressing and is also used for all soil types and crop plants. Urea significantly increases agricultural yield. In the industry application, it is used for the production of plastics, glues and resins. Urea also finds application as ruminant's forage additive agent. Urea is used as a raw material for the manufacture materials such as urea-formaldehyde resins and urea-melamine-formaldehyde used in marine plywood.  Urea is the world's most commonly used nitrogen fertilizer and indeed more urea is manufactured by mass than any other organic chemical. Containing 46% N, it is the most concentrated nitrogen fertilizer, and is readily available as free-flowing prills (granules). It is the cheapest form of nitrogen fertilizer to transport and it is also the least likely to 'cake'. It is therefore favoured in developing c...

Increasing Demand of Biological Organic Fertilizers in 2021

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Biological Organic fertilizer is the fermented materials organic matter with addition of other functional beneficial microorganism of your choice. Organic Matter which help in retaining nutrients ensures efficient uptake of nutrients by the plant. Real Strong Bio-organic Fertilizers contain various types of organic matter and functional microorganisms to help soil nutrient retention, restore soil biodiversity and reduce chemical fertilizer usage by unlocking soil minerals. Being organic in nature, they form the bulk base of the fertilizer to hold the nutrients together, preventing leaching, as they are released slowly into the soil. Seed-based matter constitutes part of the formulation in products. Click Here to Download PDF Copy Information about the microbes which has great capacity to supply the available naturally to the plants by mineralizing organic P in soil and by solubilizing precipitated phosphates. Some bacterial species have mineralization and solubilizing potential for org...