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GENERAL DISCUSSION ON SUPERABSORBENTS
>Horta-Sorb® Water Management Gels>General Discussion on Superabsorbents

General Discussion On Superabsorbents

Polymers We Use Today


Man has relied upon the natural polymer's wood, leather, silk and plants for food, clothing and tools.  For nearly a century now, with the help of advances in science, man has developed and utilized synthetic polymers such as nylon, polyethylene, and polyurethane.  Synthetic polymers offer low cost, high strength, materials used to a large degree to replace more costly natural polymers. Synthetic polymers have for many years been used in packaging, compact discs to clothing, food additives to tarter control agents in toothpaste.  The next time you are grocery shopping and are asked at the check-out "Paper or plastic?", choose plastic, as it takes 4 times as much energy to make a paper bag as the plastic one - and which one is the strongest.   Today, in the U.S. alone there are over 65 billion pounds of synthetic polymers manufactured each year.
 

Just What Is A Polymer  


Polymers are huge molecules consisting of discrete units linked together to form long chains. A simple polymer made up of only one structural unit is called a homopolymer. As the range of structural units, called monomers, become more complex a copolymer is formed.

The distinguishing features of a polymer are determined by the chemical properties of the monomeric units (i.e., what the polymer is specifically composed of), the way in which the monomeric units are linked together, and the size or molecular weight of the polymer. Each of these parameters contributes to the physical properties of the polymer product.

The synthesis of some synthetic polymeric materials, like polypropylene and polyester, involve the use of toxic compounds when assembling the monomers into polymers. This process is referred to as polymerization.  

Toxicity  


Although toxic intermediates are sometimes used in the manufacturer of polymers, the final polymer products themselves are rarely toxic. Few commercially important polymers have any toxicity at all, thus they are used in a broad range of applications from food packaging to medical care. It is important to note that toxicity is often determined by the dose or concentration of a substance, so many compounds that pose health or ecological risks at very high concentrations may pose little risk at low concentrations.

With respect to the agriculturally designed superabsorbent polymers made using acrylamide the potential of any level of toxicity is unlikely. Manufacturers test each individual production batch for the level of free monier present. The EPA has established a level of 0.10% of free monier as the upper limit of free monier present before the product registration with the agency would be required. The free monier level of all superabsorbent polymers sold in this market today is below EPA levels that require registration.

Any free monier that is present in a superabsorbent would go into solution the first time that the material is introduced to water because the free monier is soluble. Further, if the superabsorbent polymer absorbs 300-400 times its weight in water then any free monier present, after this leaching effect, would further by deluded by 300-400 times. Independent test results have shown no detectable free monier present in tissue of tomatoes grown hydroponically in a 100%, fully hydrated, superabsorbent polymer gel.

It should be pointed out that acrylamide is presently used throughout the United States, and the world, in municipal wastewater treatment facilities to separate suspended particles in potable water. Acrylamide polymers are so safe that they are presently used in toothpaste to provide tarter control.
 

USDA tox data
More, More
 

Agricultural Superabsorbents  


Union Carbide introduced superabsorbent polymers to the markets in the early 60's. The product, which absorbed 30 times its weight in water, and did not last long, was sold to the greenhouse and retail markets.  Although a select customer base did evolve the product proved to be unsuccessful in the market because of its low swell (high cost per unit of water held) and short life.

In 1974, researchers at the USDA Northern Research Lab, in Peoria, Illinois, developed a starch superabsorbent that was high swell and significantly reduced the amount of material needed to absorb a given quantity of water.  Industrial Services International, Inc. (ISI) was formed, and licensed by USDA to promote the use of these new materials.

I was President and Chairman of ISI for 16 years, from 1980 to 1996. Commercial applications were developed during the late 70's and early 80's, specifically in forestry and landscaping applications. Starch superabsorbents, although high swell, were short lived in the ground because they contained nearly 100% pure starch and were actually consumed by microbial activity, limiting their utility in all applications and resulting in slow acceptance by the markets.

In October 1982, ISI introduced the first synthetic superabsorbent to the commercial markets. These materials were high swell and long life. Over the years ISI has led the market in product development and technical services.  ISI participated in over 300 industry trade shows and has invested over $10,000,000 in marketing costs and $50,000 in research activities, principally in the United States.

Author's Footnote:
In 1996 I sold ISI to Plant Health Care, Inc., of Pittsburgh, PA along with the trade name Terra-Sorb and have subsequently established a new company to continue the development of superabsorbents globally with the highest quality, longest lasting, superabsorbents available anywhere.  The new company is called Horticultural Alliance, Inc. and is based in Sarasota, Florida.  The trade name that is earning its way to the top is Horta-Sorb
®.  Remember this name

 

Horta-Sorb® Super Absorbent Polymers  

Improve the following SOIL PROPERTIES:  


- Soil water holding capacity
- Soil water availability
- Soil infiltration
- Soil aeration
- Soil friability
- Soil flocculation
- Soil permeability
- Soil compaction is reduced
- Soil aggregate size and number
- Soil water tensions for available water
- Soil water management practices are enhanced.
 

Improve the following PLANT RESPONSES:  


- Nutrient release
- Nitrification of soil
- Reduces iron chlorosis in plants
- Decreases costs of plant production
- Microflora and bacterial content of soil
- Nutrient soil/moisture osmotic plant uptake
- Reduced transplant stress
- Increased yields
- Increase survival
- Increase shelf life
 

Features of Horta-Sorb®


- Absorbs hundreds of times its weight
- can be used alone as a rooting media
- reduce impact pressure in turf (injury)
- reduce pesticide (herbicides, fungicides) use
- absorbs soluble fertilizer and time releases it
- improves drainage when used as a soil amendment
 

 

What can Horta-Sorb® do for YOU?  


- Reduced watering - with your company labor or your clients
- reduced transplant shock - a potential problem which reflects poorly on your company
- reduce re-plants - very costly and embarrassing to your company
- shows that your company has forward thinking management
- both you and your clients will notice the difference - what a pleasure!!
 

 

Watering  

Plants are watered on a schedule between field capacity and wilting. During the time between irrigation, growth of the plant speeds up and slows down as conditions of moisture, aeration, temperature, etc., become ideal and then move to a less favorable combination. With Horta-Sorb® in the root zone this fluctuation of moisture levels is slower, consequently the growth of the plant does not slow down as much between irrigation cycles or natural rain fed irrigation and therefore plant growth is optimized. 

Understanding how Horta-Sorb
® can affect these variables enables a grower to exercise more precise control of the plant's environment. This knowledge can be used to achieve an increased growth rate at whatever combination of moisture, aeration, temperature, etc., provides the best growth for the plant.

Aeration & Water Retention  


Over 90% of moisture held by Horta-Sorb
® is available to the plant. No other component used in growing mixes gives up this much retained water to the plant. As Horta-Sorb® expands and contracts, it opens and exercises the growing medium by forcing soil particles apart.

Aeration is the space between particles in a grower's mix. It is important because it provides for the exhaust of carbon dioxide expelled by growing roots and other microorganisms in the soil. It also enables the intake of oxygen into the soil and is absolutely necessary to support root development and growth.

The amount of water retained in the soil is determined by soil particle size, e.g., the larger the particle size, the less its ability to attract and retain water, and conversely, the smaller the particle the greater its ability to attract and retain water. The smaller the particle size the stronger the water will adhere to it. Consequently, its retained moisture is less available to the plant.

Because aeration and retained available water are directly associated with larger soil particles (openings or pore spaces between particles of the mix), and water retention and lack of aeration are directly associated with smaller soil particles, what is the "ideal" growing medium for plants has perplexed growers and makers of potting mixes for years.

It is important to recognize that aeration in a mix is much more difficult to manage than moisture. If moisture deficiency exists, more frequent irrigation can be employed. But, if aeration deficiency exists, the plant must be removed and the growing environment (root zone) modified with larger particles to improve drainage and porosity.

Using Horta-Sorb
® to manage water in a mix permits growers to use very well aerated mix that when combined with more controllable moisture management provide conditions for roots to develop more quickly. Instead of using organic matter like peat moss for water management, which breaks down and eventually "plugs-up" the mix, a less degradable mix component can be used to achieve precise aeration and moisture with Horta-Sorb®. Using more stable mix components is a major step toward improving production and controlling problems associated with traditional management of a growing media.  

 

Provides Efficient Use of Water  

A major advantage of using Horta-Sorb® is its ability to make use of moisture present in soil which otherwise is not available to plants. Clay soils, for example, hold a great deal of water, but less than half of the water held is available to the roots. With Horta-Sorb® over 95% of the water held by the superabsorbent is available to the roots. The superabsorbent works in any type of soil. In fact, studies have shown that you can actually grow directly in the superabsorbent without soil.

Provides Efficient Use of Fertilizer  


When a superabsorbent absorbs water that contains fertilizer studies has shown that it time releases this fertilizer.  The same holds true with other solubles contained in the water. This feature of a superabsorbent can greatly provide cost savings for the commercial grower that otherwise would cost many fold more to obtain with conventional time-release systems.
 More

RESEARCH  


Independent research has shown that properly manufactured superabsorbent polymers for agriculture:
are inert
are not toxic
increase survival
increase shelf life
reduce watering over 50%
last in the ground for years
absorb fertilizer and time release it
can be used alone as a rooting media
reduce impact pressure in turf (injury)
reduce pesticide (herbicides, fungicides) use
improve drainage when used as a soil amendment
Research Bibliography (extensive)

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