Glufosinate-P

    • Product Name: Glufosinate-P
    • Chemical Name (IUPAC): (2S)-2-amino-4-(hydroxy(methyl)phosphinoyl)butanoic acid
    • CAS No.: 35597-43-4
    • Chemical Formula: C5H12NO4P
    • Form/Physical State: Liquid
    • Factroy Site: No. 36, Beisan East Road, Shihezi Development Zone, Xinjiang
    • Price Inquiry: sales2@boxa-chem.com
    • Manufacturer: Tianye Chemical
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    Specifications

    HS Code

    820803

    Active Ingredient Glufosinate ammonium
    Chemical Formula C5H12NO4P
    Molecular Weight 198.13 g/mol
    Product Type Non-selective herbicide
    Mode Of Action Inhibits glutamine synthetase
    Appearance Colorless to pale yellow liquid (formulation)
    Use Post-emergence weed control
    Application Method Foliar spray
    Toxicity Class Moderate (WHO Class III)
    Solubility In Water Highly soluble
    Target Pests Broadleaf and grassy weeds
    Environmental Persistence Moderate, degrades in soil
    Common Brand Names Basta, Liberty
    Cas Number 77182-82-2
    Signal Word Caution

    As an accredited Glufosinate-P factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.

    Packing & Storage
    Packing The packaging for Glufosinate-P features a white plastic drum labeled "Glufosinate-P, 98% TC, 25 kg net," with safety instructions.
    Container Loading (20′ FCL) 20′ FCL can load approximately 16MT Glufosinate-P, packaged in 25kg fiber drums, suitable for safe international chemical transport.
    Shipping Glufosinate-P should be shipped in compliance with local and international regulations. The chemical must be securely packaged in tightly sealed, labeled containers to prevent leaks. Transport should avoid extreme temperatures and physical shocks. Documentation, including Safety Data Sheets (SDS), should accompany the shipment. Handle as an agrochemical with appropriate hazard precautions.
    Storage Glufosinate-P should be stored in its original, tightly closed container in a cool, dry, well-ventilated area away from direct sunlight, heat, and incompatible substances such as strong acids and bases. Keep out of reach of children and unauthorized personnel. Store at temperatures above freezing and avoid contamination of water, food, and feed. Clearly label all storage containers.
    Shelf Life Glufosinate-P typically has a shelf life of 2-3 years when stored in tightly sealed containers at cool, dry conditions.
    Free Quote

    Competitive Glufosinate-P prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.

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    Tel: +8615380400285

    Email: sales2@boxa-chem.com

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    Certification & Compliance
    More Introduction

    Glufosinate-P: Proven Chemistry Straight from the Production Floor

    Direct Solutions Backed by Experience

    Every batch of Glufosinate-P that leaves our reactor comes from a manufacturer’s hands-on history with this herbicide. Our team understands the nuts-and-bolts demands of getting weeds under control and worries faced by farmers and agricultural companies. Instead of hiding behind buzzwords, let’s talk direct: Glufosinate-P stands for practical weed management with a chemical backbone shaped through years on the shop floor and in the lab, where we adjust every production run to meet real field expectations.

    Our facility produces Glufosinate-P in the pure acid and salt forms, focusing mostly on its ammonium salt water-dispersible granules (WDG) and concentrated liquid (SL) models. Specialists working in quality control sample every lot to lock in consistent purity above 95%, monitoring for byproducts that can cause off-target effects. Technicians use chromatography and infrared spectrometry to ensure what leaves our filling lines matches the chemical fingerprint they’d expect. The process isn’t just about ticking regulatory boxes; it comes from years of catching the small details that keep Glufosinate-P behaving consistently in fields from Peru to Poland.

    Why Model and Purity Level Matter

    Our main WDG model runs at a 50% concentration, manufactured to disperse evenly and break down fast in water without clumping or separation. As a manufacturer, we design granules to resist caking, knowing what happens during wet-season transport. Some buyers ask for the 200g/L SL concentrate for spraying through tractor-mounted booms. This version passes long-term stability trials at both high and low temperature, because no warehouse manager wants sludge after a hot month. We’ve endured the same headaches in our own storage, so we built resilience into every container.

    Most complaints about Glufosinate competitors focus on uneven dissolution or residue after spraying. In our plant, operators adjust mixing protocols and milling screens until trials show rapid, clean dilution even in hard or high-calcium irrigation water. Inspector feedback keeps us refining each batch, especially as weather and incoming raw materials shift through the year. This hands-on tweaking marks a real difference from bulk blends that get repackaged without direct monitoring.

    From Greenhouse to Field: Real-World Performance

    We’ve walked the rows alongside farmers trying to clean up glyphosate-resistant weeds. In many parts of the world, annual grasses and broadleaf volunteers eat into yields, and rotating between chemistries is the only move left. Glufosinate-P acts as a non-selective contact herbicide: once absorbed through the leaf, the plant’s metabolism shuts down within hours, and full drying appears over several days.

    We focus on the technical point that separates Glufosinate from glyphosate and paraquat. Unlike glyphosate, which moves through the whole plant, Glufosinate-P stays mainly at the site of absorption. This means fewer surprises with perennial deep-root weeds, but in return, foliar coverage counts most. Our formulation goes through dozens of atomization and nozzle tests to make sure it spreads across the whole leaf, even at lower carrier volumes.

    Field trials in our partner test plots show Glufosinate works best on smaller weeds before the four-leaf stage. For large or waxy-leaved targets, we recommend tweaking tank-mix adjuvants—something our technical advisors can explain, based on both data and real application experience. We’ve watched neighboring farms burn their crop edges with the wrong surfactants, so inside our plant, formulation chemists spend real hours evaluating wetting and sticking agents alongside the main ingredient. That’s a practical focus born from customer calls, not just lab theory.

    Meeting Modern Agriculture’s Extra Demands

    These last years, regulatory reviews increased scrutiny on residue, drift, and persistent breakdown products. No manufacturer can afford to ignore evolving standards across the EU, US, and Asia. We continuously evaluate and disclose full impurity profiles, providing analytical certificates with every order. We don’t take an “it’s good enough” shortcut—ag regulators want numbers across every active and byproduct, so our process captures even trace levels with high-performance liquid chromatography.

    One difference between a manufacturer’s output and white-label products from blenders lies in traceability. At our plant, every intermediate tank carries a barcode, every release batch attaches to a signed-off QC report. This record goes deeper than shipping paperwork: it tells us, and eventually the farmer, that they are getting Glufosinate-P with actual production transparency. Reports of counterfeit or adulterated herbicides have only grown, so we see direct batch control as an assurance for everyone in the chain.

    As for environmental controls, our production line operates under strict wastewater and air emission protocols. Factory discharge passes through capture and breakdown systems maintaining below-legal limit outflows for all listed hazard groups. Our operators receive ongoing safety training, not just a one-time lecture, because mistakes on the line don’t just risk fines but also our community’s health.

    Usage Insights from the Factory Floor

    Our R&D chemists don’t just work at a lab bench—they travel to fields where users spray Glufosinate-P on fruits, nuts, vegetables, and industrial crops. We take home feedback: correct nozzles, right spray pressures, adjusting for humidity spikes that change droplet behavior. Recommendations aren’t based on guesses. For orchard and vineyard managers using shielded booms under rows, we’ve watched best practices evolve as Glufosinate replaced less flexible burn-down herbicides.

    Tank mix compatibility checks run with commercial fertilizers, adjuvants, and other common field chemistries. Precipitation, foaming, and separation checks show up before we sign off on a batch. We track complaints to their root cause, even if it means changing a secondary supply vendor or adding hours to a dissolution test.

    Talk about application rates comes from seeing real scenarios: broadleaf and grass weed mixes in soybeans, cotton, and orchards. We discuss these rates with users and agronomists, weighing both cost and local resistance risks. Unlike some competitors, we don’t recommend blanket high-dosage treatments for all scenarios. Since Glufosinate acts as a contact herbicide, operator attention to weed stage and coverage influences success far more than simply upping the rate.

    Real Differences Compared to Other Herbicides

    Experience at the chemical plant gives us a close-up view of how Glufosinate-P stacks against glyphosate and paraquat. Glyphosate’s value comes from broad systemic movement, effective on deep-root perennial weeds. It has long been the standard, but the steady rise of resistance pushes growers to cycle or combine modes of action. Glufosinate, with its contact activity and different biochemical pathway, delivers reliable control of annual and some perennial weeds resistant to glyphosate. Cutting down on resistance pressure means smarter stewardship and better long-term field results.

    Compared to paraquat, Glufosinate-P remains safer for operators and the environment. Paraquat’s high toxicity and persistence have caused regulatory shutdowns in many markets. As a manufacturer, we track both the acute and chronic toxicity profiles of our actives. Glufosinate-P, when handled with normal safety protocols, has a lower human and non-target animal risk. Our technical staff answers application questions grounded in training, not just sales talk. We encourage integrated weed management relying on more than a single tank-mix.

    Why Vertical Integration Changes the Game

    Our customers often ask what difference it makes to source from a manufacturer rather than a trader. Over years in this business we have seen shorter, more transparent supply chains drive better predictability, from order to delivery. Blenders and repackers can complicate product traceability, delay answers to end-user questions, and risk formula drift if not tightly controlled. Our straight-from-the-plant sales system cuts out repeated handling, avoids unnecessary reprocessing, and keeps after-sales support focused and informed.

    We go beyond the “specification sheet” mentality common among third-party marketers. Instead, our connection with users continues after the sale: troubleshooting, advice on calibration, and follow-up site visits if there’s ever a performance issue. Factory technicians respond to field feedback and even join on-site residue checks around sensitive crops. We take any report of drift, crop injury, or application failure seriously, sourcing root causes all the way back to raw input or production steps. That’s a level of accountability traders and middlemen simply can’t match.

    Long-Term Stewardship and Compliance

    The Glufosinate story isn’t just about power in the field. Today’s agricultural market expects full product stewardship, including data on environmental breakdown, off-target risk, and food residue. Our environmental chemists track not only the main molecule but also metabolite routes under sun, rain, and soil microbe action. Most breakdown traces return to naturally occurring substances after a few weeks under normal farming conditions, and we monitor for persistence in crops headed for export. Regular submission of these studies keeps us compliant with changing global standards.

    Healthcare professionals and crop specialists sometimes contact us with questions about re-entry intervals, pre-harvest harvest intervals, and occupational safety. Instead of vague answers, we provide evidence directly from our own peer-reviewed studies, not just regulatory summaries. Farmers and pesticide applicators deserve a direct line to those producing the chemicals they rely on—so we support phone and online helplines staffed with actual chemists and agronomists, not just call-center workers.

    Continuous Improvement from the Inside

    Manufacturing never stays still. We invest each year in better reactor control, improved dust collection, and new formulations based on user and regulatory feedback. Operators meet weekly to review plant incidents, no matter how minor. Time and again, new ways to cut down impurities, improve granulation, and bolster packaging show up straight from these floor meetings. Our leadership has walked the same production halls for decades, so improvement isn’t a slogan—it’s daily experience.

    We don’t just react to regulations; we preempt problems. This includes developing low-drift sprayable concentrates, granules with easier handling, and minimizing secondary packaging waste. We hear complaints from farmers about heavy, hard-to-recycle packaging materials, so our packaging engineers address this in the design process, not as an afterthought.

    Support Beyond the Transaction

    Farmers, groundskeepers, and spray professionals need more than just a drum or bag. They want straightforward answers to what’s inside, how it was made, why it acts the way it does—and what to do if things don’t go as planned. Every buyer has different needs, so we equip our technical leads with in-depth, real-world training. When someone calls us about a blocked nozzle, drift problem, or question on rainfast intervals, we direct them to people who have tried these solutions in their own fields or know how to run a meaningful trial, not someone reading off a reply sheet.

    Working as a direct manufacturer gives us a unique view down the whole supply chain, from bulk chemical inputs to the spray on a growing crop. Traceability, quality adjustments, and technical guidance mark the differences you see and feel in every package of Glufosinate-P delivered under our mark. We keep the conversation open, learn from both mistakes and success, and commit to a standard that stands up from our plant floor all the way to your field.