Droplet size is a key factor in minimizing spray drift. Different types of adjuvants and sprayer operating pressures can affect the droplet size distribution in various ways. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of commercial adjuvants, namely, acids and surfactant (AS), silicone surfactant (SS), organosilicone surfactant (OS), mineral oil (MO and MO2), and copolymer (CP) adjuvants, on the droplet spectra and physicochemical properties of aqueous solutions. Hydrogen potential (pH), volumetric mass (VM), electrical conductivity (EC), surface tension (ST), contact angle (CA), and droplet spectra were measured. The droplet spectrum variables, including volumetric diameters (Dv0.1, Dv0.5, and Dv0.9), the Relative Span Factor (RSF), and percentages of the total volume of droplets with a diameter smaller than 100 µm (V100) and larger than 500 µm (V500), were determined using a laser diffraction particle analyzer (Malvern Spraytec). Spraying tests were carried out using the AXI 11003 flat fan nozzle at pressures of (0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, and 0.5) MPa. The increase in pressure increased the V100 and the RSF, with greater sensitivity observed for SS. Adjuvants such as AS, MO2 and OS showed a more balanced trend, with a smaller increase in fine droplets and a greater reduction in coarse droplets. The principal component analysis (PCA) revealed that the droplet spectrum variables were the ones that best explained the variation among the solutions. A negative correlation was identified between EC and other physicochemical properties, such as pH, ST, and CA. Therefore, these properties alone did not determine the atomization pattern. The study demonstrates that optimizing spray quality and minimizing drift require a combined consideration of adjuvant physicochemical properties and their interaction with operational pressure.
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Sérgio Basílio
M. Carneiro Júnior
Cleyton Batista de Alvarenga
Agronomy
University of Catania
Universidade Federal de Viçosa
Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo
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Basílio et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c37bf3b34aaaeb1a67edbc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy16060672