
Overview
NPK 21:5:10 is a high-nitrogen complex fertilizer where the guaranteed nutrients (by weight) are:
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N = 21%
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P₂O₅ = 5%
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K₂O = 10%
“Complex/compound” generally means each granule contains N, P and K (made by chemical reaction + granulation, or by granulating a blended mix), rather than a simple physical blend of separate single-nutrient granules.
1) Nutrient Calculation Basics (the “how much nutrient do I need?” part)
A) Convert grade to nutrient mass
For any batch size B (kg):
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Required N (kg) = 0.21 × B
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Required P₂O₅ (kg) = 0.05 × B
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Required K₂O (kg) = 0.10 × B
Example (easy to scale):
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If B = 1000 kg, then you target 210 kg N, 50 kg P₂O₅, 100 kg K₂O.
B) Choose raw materials (common choices)
You pick sources based on cost, availability, chloride sensitivity, desired N forms, granulation behavior, and regulations.
Nitrogen sources (N):
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Urea (46% N)
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Ammonium sulfate (21% N)
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Ammonium nitrate (if allowed/regulated)
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UAN / ammonia (for slurry routes)
Phosphate sources (as P₂O₅):
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MAP (monoammonium phosphate, typically ~52% P₂O₅, ~11% N)
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DAP (diammonium phosphate, typically ~46% P₂O₅, ~18% N)
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TSP (triple superphosphate, ~46% P₂O₅)
(Exact grades vary by supplier—use the COA.)
Potash sources (as K₂O):
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MOP / KCl (typically ~60% K₂O) – economical, adds chloride
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SOP / K₂SO₄ (typically ~50% K₂O) – chloride-free option
C) Build the equation system (core of the “calculation”)
Each raw material contributes some N, P₂O₅, K₂O. You solve for the masses so totals match the target.
If you select, for example Urea + MAP + MOP:
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Urea contributes N only
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MAP contributes N + P₂O₅
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MOP contributes K₂O only
So you can compute in a clean order:
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Set MOP mass from required K₂O
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Set MAP mass from required P₂O₅
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Top up remaining N using Urea
Then you check:
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Total mass = B (allowing for fillers/conditioners if needed)
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Moisture, granulation aid, and losses (dust, recycle) are accounted for in the plant mass balance
Tip: Always calculate with actual assay values (supplier COA) and apply your plant’s typical process loss factor (dust + off-size recycle).
2) Production Routes for 21-5-10 Complex Fertilizer
Route 1 — Steam/Slurry Granulation (Compound Granulation)
Best when you want “true complex” granules and good uniformity.
Main steps
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Raw material preparation: screening/crushing to consistent particle size.
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Pre-mix: dry solids blended with recycled fines (seed material).
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Granulation: in drum/pan granulator using steam and/or binder, sometimes a slurry (e.g., urea melt, phosphates).
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Drying: reduce moisture for storage stability.
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Screening: separate on-size product; recycle oversize (crush) and undersize (return).
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Cooling: improve hardness, reduce caking risk.
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Coating: anti-caking / dust control.
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Packaging / bulk loading.
Advantages
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Each granule carries NPK uniformly
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Better control of size distribution and strength
Route 2 — Bulk Blending + Re-granulation
Used when you have straight fertilizers available and want granules rather than a simple blend.
Main steps
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Accurate dosing → mixing → granulation/densification → drying/cooling → screening/coating
Advantages
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Flexible formulations, easier switching
Trade-off -
Granule uniformity depends heavily on granulation quality and recycle control
Route 3 — Chemical Reaction (Nitrophosphate / Phosphate-based complexes)
More capital-intensive; used in integrated plants (acidulation + ammoniation + granulation).
This route can tailor N forms and reduce hygroscopicity with the right chemistry.
3) Formulation Considerations (beyond N-P-K numbers)
Nitrogen form strategy
For 21% N, you may want a mix of:
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Ammoniacal N (steadier, less leaching)
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Urea N (cost effective, needs urease considerations)
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Nitrate N (fast response, but leaching risk)
Your target market (climate/soil/crop) determines the best N form balance.
Chloride sensitivity
If you target crops sensitive to chloride (some fruits, tobacco, certain vegetables), consider:
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SOP (K₂SO₄) instead of MOP (KCl)
Secondary nutrients & micronutrients (optional)
You can add:
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S (from ammonium sulfate or SOP)
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Mg (kieserite)
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Zn, B, Fe, Mn (granulation-friendly forms, coated or micro-granulated)
Physical quality targets (typical)
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Granule size: commonly 2–4 mm (market dependent)
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Low dust
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High crush strength
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Low caking tendency
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Stable moisture
4) Process Control & Quality Tests (must-have checks)
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N, P₂O₅, K₂O assay (lab verification)
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Moisture (affects caking and flow)
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Particle size distribution (screens)
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Bulk density (bag fill consistency)
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Crush strength / hardness
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Angle of repose / flowability
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Caking test (storage simulation)
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Chloride content (if exporting/labeling)
5) Practical Notes for a Stable 21-5-10 Product
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Keep moisture under control (drying + cooling + coating).
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Maintain a consistent recycle ratio (fines act as seed, stabilizes granulation).
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Use an anti-caking coating suited to your climate (humid vs dry regions).
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Calibrate feeders often—small errors in phosphate dosing cause big spec drift at only 5% P₂O₅.
Summary
NPK 21:5:10 is a nitrogen-forward complex fertilizer. The key to preparing it is:
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Convert the grade to required nutrient masses for your batch size
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Select compatible N/P/K sources
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Solve the mass-balance so nutrient targets are met
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Produce via granulation (preferred for “complex”) with strong control of moisture, recycle, and screening
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Verify chemical spec + physical granule quality before packing


