|
HS Code |
930532 |
| Product Type | Water Soluble Fertilizer |
| Form | Liquid / Powder |
| Solubility | 100% in water |
| Application Method | Foliar spray or drip irrigation |
| Primary Nutrients | NPK (Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium) |
| Secondary Nutrients | May include Ca, Mg, S |
| Micronutrients | May include Fe, Zn, Mn, Cu, B, Mo |
| Ph Range | 4.5 - 7.0 |
| Shelf Life | 2-3 years (when stored properly) |
| Compatibility | Compatible with most agrochemicals |
| Usage Frequency | Weekly or as recommended |
| Suitability | All crops (open field and greenhouse) |
| Dissolution Time | Few minutes in water |
| Appearance | Fine powder or clear liquid |
| Storage Conditions | Cool, dry place away from sunlight |
As an accredited Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | Bright green and white sachet, labeled "Water Soluble Fertilizer," 1 kg, resealable, clear usage instructions and safety icons on front. |
| Container Loading (20′ FCL) | Container Loading (20′ FCL): Typically accommodates 15-20 metric tons of water soluble fertilizer (liquid/powder), packed in drums, bags, or IBCs. |
| Shipping | Shipping for Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid/Powder) requires secure, leak-proof containers to prevent spillage and contamination. Packaging must be clearly labeled and comply with transportation regulations. Store in a cool, dry area, away from direct sunlight. Ensure proper documentation and handle with care to maintain product integrity during transit. |
| Storage | Water soluble fertilizer (liquid/powder) should be stored in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from direct sunlight and moisture. Keep containers tightly sealed to prevent contamination and clumping. Store away from incompatible substances and out of reach of children and pets. Ensure proper labeling and avoid extreme temperatures for optimal product stability and shelf life. |
| Shelf Life | Shelf life of water soluble fertilizer (liquid/powder) is typically 2-3 years when stored in cool, dry, sealed conditions. |
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High Purity 98%: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with high purity 98% is used in precision horticulture fertigation systems, where it ensures rapid nutrient uptake and uniform crop growth. Fine Particle Size <100 microns: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with fine particle size <100 microns is used in greenhouse hydroponic applications, where it promotes complete dissolution and clog-free irrigation lines. Viscosity Grade Low: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) of low viscosity grade is used in high-speed fertigation pumps, where it allows efficient and consistent nutrient delivery. EC Value 1.5 mS/cm: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with EC value 1.5 mS/cm is used in sensitive vegetable cultivation, where it provides controlled salinity for optimal plant health. Chelated Micronutrient Content 0.5%: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with chelated micronutrient content 0.5% is used in foliar spray programs, where it enhances leaf absorption and corrects micronutrient deficiencies rapidly. Stability Temperature up to 40°C: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) stable up to 40°C is used in tropical outdoor crop farming, where it maintains nutrient integrity under high ambient temperatures. pH range 5.5–6.5: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with pH range 5.5–6.5 is used in commercial tomato cultivation, where it supports nutrient compatibility and prevents precipitation. N-P-K Ratio 20-20-20: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with N-P-K ratio 20-20-20 is used in balanced nutrition regimes for fruit trees, where it stimulates overall plant vigor and maximizes yield. Moisture Content <2%: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with moisture content <2% is used in automated dry mixing systems, where it prevents caking and ensures consistent flowability. Solubility >99%: Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) with solubility >99% is used in drip irrigation, where it guarantees complete dissolution for continuous nutrient supply across the root zone. |
Competitive Water Soluble Fertilizer (Liquid / Powder) prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615365186327 or mail to sales3@liwei-chem.com.
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Tel: +8615365186327
Email: sales3@liwei-chem.com
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Each day, growers face a simple question: how to feed crops effectively so yields meet expectations without unnecessary waste. We have seen the challenges in the field and in greenhouses: uneven growth, stubborn deficiencies, runoff, and unpredictable weather. Water soluble fertilizer has come out of our practical work, tested season after season, not just as a theory on paper. With both liquid and powder forms, this approach offers growers more consistency and a better return on every kilogram applied.
Choosing between granular and water soluble fertilizer often comes down to the need for speed and control. Granular fertilizers take time to break down, especially when rain is scarce or irrigation runs light. Once water soluble fertilizer hits the tank and meets water, every nutrient becomes immediately available—no long breakdown, no guesswork. Crops get what they need right at their roots or on their leaves, so you waste less and see results in the field within days.
Our production lines handle both liquid concentrates and powders with a focus on purity. Every batch leaves here with full solubility, so no chunk settles in the tank, even after hours of mixing. Traces of insoluble residue can plug drippers and spray lines, which is why we have invested in better sieving and filtration right at the factory. This is about more than a spec on a label—it saves you time and keeps your system running.
Over the decades, our formulation chemists have blended dozens of NPK ratios and micronutrient mixes, based directly on feedback from growers, farm consultants, and crop scientists. There is no universal formula—raspberries on light soil take something different from lettuce under glass, and fruit trees in high-alkaline regions require their own approach.
Our liquid line covers balanced models such as 20-20-20 for general growth, high potassium mixes like 5-5-40 for fruiting and ripening, and formulations tailored for leafy vegetables or root crops. Powders run from traditional balanced feeds to specialty blends loaded with calcium or magnesium, all tested for full solubility and proven performance on both field and protected crops.
We handle custom nutrient designs for growers with unusual soil tests or water chemistry, and we adjust batches in response to new research on plant nutrition. Minimum impurity levels stay below 0.2 percent on all major blends. Micronutrients come chelated—all backed by real uptake data, not just lab claims. Manufacturing controls for pH and sodium content help lock down the risks that can build up with repeated use.
On the ground, the routines for liquid and powder fertilizer look different. Most powder goes into stock tanks or feed carts, mixed in with irrigation systems—drip, sprinkler, or even hydroponic setups. Many vegetable growers shoot for weekly or biweekly sprays, sometimes dialing in doses every day during hot spells or periods of fast growth.
Our team has watched hundreds of tomatoes per row respond to a foliar mist made from liquid fertilizer, picking up leaf color and flower set in under a week. Grape growers hit targeted blocks with calcium-rich blends as berries begin to size, while strawberry fields get low-nitrogen options to protect fruit quality late in the season. Greenhouse producers report cleaner lines once they switch from generic blends to our cleared, low-residue formulas.
Water quality always matters—high bicarbonates or iron in the supply will lock up key nutrients if not considered in the recipe. Our technical advisors adjust mixes for these real-world quirks, and we test finished blends on hard and soft water alike before scaling up any batch. This minimizes surprises in the field, which means fewer headaches for the crew running the show.
Growers choose between liquids and powders mainly for reasons of scale, storage, and speed. Powders store better in hot environments where evaporation can become a risk for liquids. Farmers with variable water supply often pick powders for longer shelf life and flexibility. The liquid format shines on smaller properties or wherever growers need to respond fast—pre-mixed concentrates pour straight into the sprayer, no waiting for batches to dissolve, no risk of uneven mixing, and zero dust during use.
Mixing practices in factories differ. For powders, we blend raw materials in temperature-controlled drums, running particle size tests to achieve fast dissolution. Liquid batches run through several filters before bottling, and stability checks assess shelf life under real warehouse conditions. This hands-on approach keeps critical micronutrients—like boron, manganese, iron, and zinc—homogenous in every liter or kilogram.
On the farm, liquids simplify variable-rate applications in precision agriculture. Used with fertigation controllers, our liquids give more direct control over nutrient delivery across different blocks, even during one irrigation run. Powders shine wherever freight costs matter, as they pack more nutrition per kilo compared to comparable liquid volumes. This matters most for outlying regions or export crops.
Another common question for us involves foliar versus soil-drench feeding. Liquids work smoothly for foliar treatments, where even coverage matters, and they cling well to foliage during cool, humid mornings. Powder formulations can serve either root-zone or foliar feeding, but always depend on careful mixing and agitation. Our support staff walks farmers through the process so the full batch gets used, not just the part that dissolves fastest.
Producing water soluble fertilizers in a chemical factory is a constant balancing act. We start with raw materials tested for contaminants, including heavy metals, chloride, and insoluble grit. Factories keep these at levels safe for both crops and the groundwater. Our safety protocols extend right down to bagging—humidity control, triple-sealed drums, and desiccant packs for powders mean clumping stays out of every batch. For liquids, we stabilize batches against separation and chemical drift.
We invest in batch tracking and records not to tick boxes, but because our field teams tie shipment numbers back to customer reports. If someone detects a difference in crop response, we can trace ingredients and production conditions within hours. This feedback loop shapes future product lines, limits waste, and proves critical when adapting to new crops.
No two production runs stay exactly alike. Ambient temperature, ingredient source, and even transport conditions come into play. We train plant operators to spot visual cues of off-spec material early on—off-color batches, foaming during mixing, or slower-than-normal dissolution. Spotting these small issues in the factory avoids big headaches down the supply chain.
From our perspective, sustainability means more than slogans. Teams in our facility spend time reviewing data from runoff and leaching studies, adjusting formulas to keep nutrients where plants need them, not washing downstream. Over the past five years, we have cut overall phosphate loss by switching to more controlled-release elements in some powder blends. In the liquid line, new chelate chemistries have reduced total metal loading without cutting crop yields.
All supply chains experience shocks—in logistics, raw materials, or weather. Having both liquid and powder lines lets us respond to local shortages or sudden demand spikes. During drought cycles, fertigation keeps crops alive on less water than broadcast or granular feeding. In wet years, liquid foliar feeding limits nutrient loss when field conditions keep heavy equipment out.
Our plant shares its environmental data with local authorities, measuring runoff and emissions monthly. Factory discharge limits are not just numbers painted in the office; they mean our neighbors see less nutrient load in the watershed, season after season. Teams constantly trial new recovery methods for spilled or off-grade material, keeping our landfill numbers on the decline.
Safe handling starts on the production floor. Operators receive regular training on dust collection, spill management, and mixing procedures for both powders and liquids. All storage tanks—acidic or alkaline—fit OSHA-compliant labeling and monitoring. Lab staff run daily pH, conductivity, and shelf stability checks long before products leave the warehouse.
Family farms and commercial growers alike ask about safety once these products reach their properties. Our application guidelines are written based on real field trials, not just regulatory minimums. We stayed practical: less dust, better seals, and reduced skin irritation during use. Labels flag key risks, and our farm support line prioritizes real-world advice—how to respond to accidental spills, safe tank cleaning, and measures to prevent nutrient drift onto unintended crops.
We also keep a line open to local poison control centers, updating them on seasonal batch numbers and ingredient changes. Accidents remain rare, but transparency makes the difference if anyone faces trouble during a long harvest week.
Today, precision agriculture tools shift expectations. Drones, variable-rate sprayers, and real-time nutrient monitoring reshape how farmers use fertilizer. Our water soluble lines fit well into these systems. Our powders and liquids dissolve rapidly in feeder tanks controlled by automated pumps, eliminating the lag time that slows older methods. Batch codes pair with QR tracking, giving agronomists field-level data on what went in and when.
Farmers now ask about compatibility with sensors—whether weak acids in the fertilizer can disrupt ion-specific probes or plug emitters on hydroponic racks. We test finished products in demo greenhouses before scaling up, working directly with automation tech suppliers to solve issues. For instance, we tweak anti-caking agents and line up tank cleaning protocols for self-flushing irrigation setups.
Seeing this technology enter the mainstream, we have shifted some of our development into ultra-pure lines, with lower sodium and sulfur content, to suit microgreens and vertical farms. Regular batches stay affordable for broad-acre use, but specialty blends meet the needs of robotic planters, indoor farms, and greenhouse sensors. Our teams constantly gather data from installations to ensure these products work, not just in controlled trials, but on real farms and in true commercial cycles.
Manufacturing fertilizers in a modern chemical plant provides a unique advantage. We see every challenge growers encounter: drought that changes irrigation needs mid-season, abrupt market swings that push for flexible feeding schedules, and unexpected nutrient lockout from local soil issues. Our product design changes to mirror what actually happens in fields, not just ideal greenhouse tests.
For instance, fruit tree growers see visible results from chelated micronutrient sprays after frost events, cutting out replanting costs. Protected cropping operations running recirculating systems get more out of every kilo of our powder line, with less sludge left behind at season’s end. Trials on sensitive crops like spinach and basil guide our limits on boron, manganese, and chloride content. Over time, our role shifts from just supplying inputs to guiding application protocols, based on real-time feedback.
We share this experience openly. Each season, senior staff head into the field, meeting with large cooperatives and independent growers to discuss crop performance and challenges. If problems arise—mixing errors, unexpected precipitation, or local regulations—our production and support staff stay in touch until growers find solutions that work with our product, not just alongside it. This feedback cycle drives our innovation pipeline, keeps our teams focused on what matters, and gives growers one less thing to worry about during busy weeks.
Our water soluble fertilizer line stands on hard-earned experience, not theory. Products adapt to stricter regulations, changing crop demands, and tighter labor constraints every year. Manufacturing, research, and field support connect each batch to tried-and-tested solutions, focusing on ease of use, plant uptake, and real-world effectiveness. Feedback from growers, data from field trials, and lessons from every dry or wet season fuel constant improvements in both powder and liquid lines.
That’s what separates a true manufacturer’s product from something off the shelf. We build every batch to handle the realities of commercial agriculture, intense environmental scrutiny, and grower needs that change as fast as the weather. Each barrel or bag draws on decades of batch records, technical know-how, and firsthand experience from the same fields our clients work every day.
In short, it is the experience of thousands of growers, dozens of agricultural scientists, and every shift on the factory floor that shapes these fertilizers. Whether you work fifteen acres by hand or drive the latest automated greenhouse, water soluble fertilizer—liquid or powder—offers proven, practical support for greener, stronger, and more reliable crops season after season.