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Spray Drift – What causes it and how to avoid it

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Presentation on theme: "Spray Drift – What causes it and how to avoid it"— Presentation transcript:

1 Spray Drift – What causes it and how to avoid it
Pesticide Applicator Certification For: Professional Development Solutions Tom Wolf AgriMetrix Research and Training Saskatoon, SK @Nozzle_Guy 1 1

2 Drift – The Ambassador of Spraying

3 3 Es of Pesticide Application
Application Goals 3 Es of Pesticide Application Effective Efficient Environmental Norman Morgan 2 2

4 Airborne movement of droplets or vapours from the treated area
Spray Drift Airborne movement of droplets or vapours from the treated area Droplet drift usually occurs within minutes of the application, vapour drift can occur minutes or days after application

5 On-Swath Deposit Low boom Slow speed High boom Fast speed

6 Drift Spray Accountancy
100% 1.7% 2 m 5-120 m 5 m 1 m 82% 10% 5% 1% 0.3% On Target Off Target

7 45 M kg x 80% sprayed x 1.7% airborne loss
The Size of the Problem 45 M kg x 80% sprayed x 1.7% airborne loss = 612,000 kg

8 Drift Patterns

9 Deposit Patterns

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12 Drift Causes

13 Small Droplets Wind Drift!

14 Factors Involved in Spray Drift
Wind speed Atmospheric turbulence - thermal - mechanical Droplet size Droplet velocity - sprayer type - pressure Initial size - sprayer type - nozzle type, size - pressure - formulation Rate of evaporation - temperature - RH Transit time - velocity - boom height Droplet drift

15 What Causes Drift? Low Energy Exposure to Force Movement

16 Exposure to Force Low Energy Strategy Increase size Increase velocity
e.g. low drift nozzles, air assist Exposure to Force Protect Decrease exposure time e.g. shrouds, low booms, slow travel

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19 Areas of unequal pressure create vortices which remove small droplets from the spray cloud

20 Focus is droplet size and boom height
Reducing the Problem Nozzle selection Sprayer settings Focus is droplet size and boom height

21 Drift Potential Drift Potential 50 80015 11003 40 75 psi 30 40 psi
Spray Pressure Fan Angle Flow Rate Nozzle Type 50 80015 11003 40 75 psi 30 40 psi 8003 8003 ER8003 Drift Potential 20 20 psi 8006 SR8003 10 DR8003

22 Droplet Size Distributions
Let’s talk about how we describe droplet size. Here is a typical distribution of spray volume in an agricultural spray, using a conventional nozzle (red). Note that the spray contains both very small (10 µm) and very large (1000 µm) droplets. The majority of the spray volume is in intermediate sized droplets between 200 and 500 µm When we lower the pressure (or change to a low-drift nozzle), we still retain the same large span of droplet diameters ranging from 10 to 1000 µm (blue bars). But now, the distribution has shifted to the right. This means less volume in small droplets (less drift), more volume in large droplets. The majority of the dose remains in the middle region, but more of it is in the larger droplets. As long as we don’t go too far with coarseness, we’re OK. All low-drift nozzles operate on the same basic principle (internal pressure drop creating larger droplets). 22

23 Spray Quality

24 Field Tests

25 Flexi-Coil Field Sprayer
Application volume = 100 L/ha Travel speed = 13 km/h XR8003, 40 psi AI110025, 58 psi

26 Medium 26

27 Very Coarse At 40 psi, spray quality is starting to be good for general weed control 27

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29 Gregson High-Clearance Sprayer
Application volume = 100 L/ha Travel speed = 22.5 km/h TT11005, 40 psi AI11004, 64 psi

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31 Boom Height Drift potential doubles for higher boom
Use auto boom-height controller

32 “Auto-Boom”

33 Reduced Spray Pressure?
Conventional flat fans psi Pre-orifice psi Air-Induced 40 – 60 psi (low-pressure type) 60 – 80 psi (high pressure type) Ensure that patterns are optimal

34 Droplet Velocity (Energy)

35 Droplet Velocity Distributions
Spray velocity tends to slow down with coarser sprays, due to the lower internal pressures of these nozzles. This means that large drops from a low-drift nozzle are more easily retained than the large drops from conventional nozzles – a good thing. 35

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37 Principle of HARDI TWIN air assistance

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39 Air Off Air On

40 Drift- at various wind speeds (data from Hardi)

41 Little Drift Lots of Drift

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43 Models and Regulations
Courtesy of Paul Miller, SRI

44 New Buffer Zone Label Language
Untreated (Buffer Zone) 20 m Conventional application 15 m Low-drift application untreated 5 m Very low-drift application untreated

45 “Do not apply with spray droplets smaller than ASAE medium classification”
“…When using a shroud, BZ can be reduced by 70%...”

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47 Buffer Zone Calculator

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55 Example

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57 Atmospheric Conditions
Courtesy George Ramsey, DuPont

58 Daily Wind Pattern Time of day (h) Wind speed at 1 m height (m/s) 8 7
6 5 4 Wind speed at 1 m height (m/s) 3 2 1 4 8 12 16 20 24 Time of day (h)

59 Mechanical Turbulence

60 Thermal Turbulence

61 Inversion Conditions Dispersion
Spray cloud disperses, moving upward and downwind Unstable (Desirable normal daytime conditions) Warm Soil Inversion Conditions Disapppears after sunrise and 2-3 degree increase in temperature. Warm, still air Spray cloud hangs over treated area in high concentration Stable (inversion) Cold air - dense, still Cold soil

62 Unstable Stable (Inversion) Height Temperature Height Temperature

63 Height Temperature 3 pm 11 pm 3 am 5 am 7 am 8 am 9 am 3 pm
Sunset 10 pm 3 am 5 am Sunrise 5 am 7 am 8 am 9 am 3 pm Height Temperature

64 3 pm 11 pm Sunset 10 pm 3 am 5 am Sunrise 5 am 7 am 8 am 9 am 3 pm

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70 Wind Calm conditions not well suited for spraying
unpredictable wind direction sometimes mistaken for inversions Low, steady winds ideal Predictable direction Dilution of spray cloud High winds increase total loss, but do not always increase deposits

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72 Delta T (droplet evaporation)

73 Most Important Factors Governing Drift
Trained, conscientious operator Communication / Relationships Weather Conditions Spray Quality Shrouds Boom Height Travel Speed


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