Functional Coatings by Natural and Synthetic Agents for Insect Control and Their Applications

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Abstract

Insect repellent textiles offer protection against disease-causing vectors such as mosqui-toes, flies, and ticks. Protection is based on the incorporation of insect repellent compounds present in plant oil derivatives or synthetic oils. The effectiveness and application of natural insect repellents such as citronella grass, lemongrass, rosemary, peppermint, holy basil, tea tree, neem, lavender, thyme, lemon eucalyptus, clove, and cinnamon oils, as well as synthetic compounds permethrin, allethrin, malathion, DEET, DETA, IR3535, and picaridin, are compared here. The insect repellent and insecticidal effectiveness of natural compounds in their pure form are very low due to their high volatility. The effectiveness has been greatly improved through slow-release systems such as encapsulation of the essential oils and is comparable to synthetic compounds used for insect control purposes. Due to the lasting toxicity of synthetic compounds to humans and the environment, the use of natural compounds should become a more preferred method of insect control.

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Coetzee, D., Militky, J., & Venkataraman, M. (2022, April 1). Functional Coatings by Natural and Synthetic Agents for Insect Control and Their Applications. Coatings. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12040476

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