BobCajun
Well-Known Member
Advanced Nutrients' products, like Sensi Bloom, contain substantial urea, 11468.12 ppm according to this analysis http://www.integralhydro.com/USANanalysis.html I read an article that said that urea had no beneficial effect in hydroponic solutions at all. It breaks down to ammonia, which I can't see being good. Ammonium compounds are said to cause harshness. AN says that the urea keeps the pH in the right range by balancing out the pH effect of the nitrate part of the mixture. I don't know.
After doing a study with several concentrations of Urea and Nitrate -both by themselves and combined – this research group found out that Urea does not improve crop yields in NFT systems and indeed pure nitrate does the best job when no media is in place. When media is introduced, organic media shows a faster Urea to Ammonia conversion but Ammonia to nitrate conversions are faster in inorganic media. However, the effect of Urea remains poor in the sense that nitrate-only crops outperformed almost all crops except for some plants grown with small quantities of Urea which proves to be beneficial in the same way as small additions of ammonia are already known to be. So in the end, is it worth to add Urea to a hydroponic formulation ? The scientific evidence says that Urea does not have any clear beneficial effect that could not be gained by a small addition of ammonium salts, something which has already been confirmed by several studies done on different plant species. If you are planning on starting a new hydroponics crop adding about 5-10% of your total nitrogen as ammonium may prove to be beneficial but any addition of Urea seems completely unecessary.
http://scienceinhydroponics.com/2010/05/urea-in-hydroponics-positive-or-negative.html