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Nitrogen, phosphorous
and potassium are the three major nutrients required for plant
growth. An increase in the worlds population has, in
turn, increased the dependence on agriculture in the last
few decades. And agriculture has been made possible primarily
due to extensive use of chemical fertilizers made from those
elements.
There is a shortage of global resources
of phosphatesthe minerals from which phosphorous fertilizers
are made. For a country like India which is dependent on agriculture,
natural abundance of phosphates is abysmally lowonly
142 out of a total of 306 tonnes found here are of high grade.
As a major part of Indias deposits
are in the form of low grade ores (lgo), the country needs
to import most of the phosphorous fertilizers.
Therefore, there is a pressing need to develop ways to utilize
the low grade phosphorous deposits. Scientists at Mohanlal
Sukhadia University in Udaipur showed how this may be done.
The researchers decided to produce fused
calcium magnesium phosphate (fcmp) from low grade ores. fcmp
is a fertilizer that is currently produced by fusing high
grade phosphate ore with additional materials such as olivine
(magnesium iron silicate), which has to be mined exclusively
for this purpose. The team fused low grade ores with additives
such as serpentinite (available as a waste product of the
decorative stone industry), quartz, magnesium oxide and silica.
The right ratio of these additives yielded the fertilizer.
fcmp is a slow release fertilizer: it
releases phosphorous to the plants in a sustained manner.
This is because it is water-insoluble and does not get washed
away during irrigation or heavy rains. This allows it to be
retained by the soil over an extended time period. Although
used worldwide, fcmp is expensive and not commercially viable
in countries like India.
The method is cheap and no solid
waste is generated. This could help us utilize large
reserves of low grade ores, the authors wrote in their
paper published in the March 25 issue of Current Science.
The process is electric-power centric but within the
next few years India should have sufficient nuclear power
, said Pushpendra Ranawat, the lead author of the study.
Source: Down
To Earth, May 2009

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