Insecticides are products of the chemical industry.
There isn't one chemical equation for pesticides as there are many pesticides which are created differently.
The most important applications are the fabrication of chemical and nuclear weapons.
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1954 was awarded to Linus Pauling for his research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances.
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This depends on the application; if you need to produce a specific compound a higher yield is of course preferred.
Harold Henry Shepard has written: 'The chemistry and action of insecticides'
Applied chemistry, of course! Applied chemistry is as the name implies - it's taking chemistry and creating an application - in this particular case, the "application" is dry or damaged hair.
Mathematics is applied to physics and chemistry.
Forensic chemistry is the application of chemistry to law enforcement or the failure of products and processes.
This is the industrial application of chemistry.
Insecticides in gardening or agriculture are used to reduce the population of an insect which is causing harm to the crop to an acceptable level. They can range from something as simple as an insecticidal soap (such as dish soap) to very complex and very poisonous commercial insecticides which kill all the insects in its application range.
in chemistry the use of nanoscience is to enlarge your penis :D
the application of the theories and principles of chemistry to practical purposes.
K. M. S. Sundaram has written: 'Fenitrothion residues in some forestry samples from a plantation forest following experimental spray application for five consecutive years' -- subject(s): Spruce budworm, Fenitrothion, Insecticides, Biodegradation, Control 'Distribution and persistence of aminocarb in terrestrial components of the forest environment after semi-operational application of two mixtures of Matacil 180F' -- subject(s): Insecticides, Biodegradation, Carbamates 'Distribution, dissipation and persistence of aminocarb in aquatic components of the forest environment after aerial application of two Matacil 180F formulations' -- subject(s): Application, Insecticides 'Persistence and degradation of diflubenzuron in conifer foliage, forest litter and soil, following simulated aerial application' -- subject(s): Application, Biodegradation, Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Pesticides, Insecticides, Pesticides
full detals about application chemstry in core enginiring
Applied chemistry is simply the application of theories and principles of chemistry to practical purposes. This is a logical step to choose after studying chemistry.
Vectors