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INSECTICIDE
Location:Home » Products » Agrochemical » INSECTICIDE

Description
                                                        CYPERMETHRIN
IDENTIFICATION
                                                                            
Common name:Cypermethrin
Iupac name: (RS)-(z-cyano-3-phenoxybenzyl (1RS, 3RS;1RS,3SR)-3-(2,2-dichlorovinyl) -2,2-dimethylcyclopropanecarboxylate
Chemical abstracts name:     cyano(3-phenoxyphenyl)methyl 3-(2,2-dichloroethenyl)-2,2- dimethylcyclopropanecarboxylate
Type: Insecticide for Agriculture
CAS RN: [52315-07-8] (formerly [69865-47-0], [86752-99-0] and many other numbers)
M.F.: C22H19Cl2NO3
Mol Wt: 416.3
 
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY                                
Form (appearance): Odourless crystals (pure); (tech., yellow-brown viscous semi-solid at ambient temperatures)
Composition:=Tech. grade is 90% pure
M.P.: 61-83 ℃, depending on isomer ratio
V.P.: 2.0 × 10-4 mPa (20℃)
F.P.: Not autoflammable; non-explosive
S.G.: 1.24 (20℃)
Solubility: In water 0.004 mg/l (pH 7). In acetone, chloroform, cyclohexanone, xylene >450, ethanol 337, hexane 103 (all in g/I, 20℃)
Stability: Relatively stable in neutral and weakly acidic media, with optimum stability at pH 4. Hydrolysed in alkaline media; DT50 1.8 d (pH 9, 25℃); stable at pH 5 and 7 (20℃). Relatively stable to light in field situations. Thermally stable up to 220℃
Henry: 2.0 × 10-2 Pa m3 mol-1 (calc.)
KowlogP: 6.6
 
APPLICATION                                                 
Formulation types: EC;GR; UL; WR
Mode of action: on-systemic insecticide with contact and stomach action. AlSO exhibits anti-feeding action. Good residual activity on treated plants
Uses: Control of a wide range of insects, especially Lepidoptera, but also Coleoptera, Diptera, Hemiptera, and other classes, in fruit (including citrus), vines, vegetables, potatoes, cucurbits, lettuce, capsicums, tomatoes, cereals, maize, soya beans, cotton, coffee, cocoa, rice, pecans, oilseed rape, beet, ornamentals, forestry, etc. Control of flies and other insects in animal houses; and mosquitoes, cockroaches, houseflies and other insect pests in public health. Also used as an animal ectoparasiticide
Compatibility: Incompatible with alkaline materials
 
MAMMALIAN TOXICOLOGY                     
Oral: Acute oral LD50 for rats 250-4150 (tech. 7180), mice 138 mg/kg.
Skin and eye: Acute percutaneous LD50 for rats >4920, rabbits >2460 mg/kg. Slight skin and eye irritant (rabbits). May be a weak skin sensitiser.
Inhalation: LC50 (4 h) for rats 2.5 mg/l. NOEL (2 y) for dogs 5, rats 7.5 mg/kg.
ADI: (JMPR) 0.05 mg/kg b.w. [1981]; 0.05 mg/kg b.w. (JECFA evaluation) [1996].
Other Oral toxicity values for cypermethrin depend on such factors as: carrier, cis:trans ratio of the sample, species, sex, age and degree of fasting. Values reported sometimes differ markedly.
Toxicity: WHO (a.i.) II; EPA (formulation) II
EC hazard: (Xn; R20/22| R43| N; R50)
 
ECOTOXICOLOGY                                         
Birds: Acute oral LD50 for mallard ducks >10000, chickens >2000 mg/kg.
Fish: LC50 (96 h) for rainbow trout 0.69, sheepshead minnow 2.37 μg/l; under field conditions, fish are not at risk from normal agricultural usage.
Daphnia: LC50 (48 h) 0.15 μg/l.
Bees: Highly toxic to honeybees in laboratory tests, but field applications at recommended dosages do not put hives at risk. LD50 (24 h) (oral) 0.035 μg/bee; (topical) 0.02 μg/bee. Other beneficial spp. Not toxic to Collembola (J. A. Wiles & G. K. Frampton, Pestic. Sci., 47, 273 (1996)).
 
ENVIRONMENTAL FATE                              
Soil/Environment: EHC 82 (WHO, 1989). EHC review concludes that biological degradation is rapid, and consequently levels of cypermethrin and its degradation products in soil and surface waters are very low. Animals For studies of the biotransformation of cypermethrin in animal tissues, see Pestic. Sci., 1987, 21, I and ibid., 1990, 30, 159.
/In soil, typical DT50 60 d (fine sandy loam); hydrolysis with cleavage of the ester bond occurs and also further hydrolytic and oxidative degradation; see T. R. Roberts & M. E. Standen, Pestic. Sci., 1977, 8, 305. Field dissipation is much faster. In river water, rapid degradation occurs, DT50 c. 5 d.
 


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