>> Pyrethroid synthesis refers to the process of synthesizing pyrethroids. Carboxylic acid synthesis, on the other hand, refers to the process of synthesizing carboxylic acids.
>A synthetic substance is a material made by combining or altering various natural or artificially produced substances in a laboratory setting, while a natural substance is a material that is found in nature and has not been altered or synthesized in a lab. Synthetic substances are typically created to mimic or improve upon the properties of natural substances and are commonly used in many everyday products, such as plastics, fertilizers, and pharmaceuticals.
>
So if I understand correctly, oxalic acid, dihydrate is a product of synthesis, i.e. it is a synthetic acid and a product that replaces a natural substance.
In addition, there is also a synthetic product, which cannot be found in nature, but the main component in the work process is a plant from which pyrethrin is produced by thermal distillation (as in the production and distillation of alcohol) and the raw product is further processed, sorted and purified, for example, into one of the variants - synthetic T-fluvalinate.
Are the beekeepers right that both products are natural, but one is a synthetic substitute and the other, as a primary raw material, is largely grown in African and Croatian fields as a farm plant? So the origin is also natural? A plant that grows in many places in the world?
And how to understand it, it is a business trick and an unfair competition of beekeepers and suppliers of information about the treatment of acaricide, when I hear that synthetic oxalic acid is a natural product? At the same time, it is a synthetically produced substitute for a natural product, which is also not normally mined in a mountain or a mine, but, like fluvalinate, is mainly contained in the plant.
Gustav Palan
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