Products

Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate

    • Product Name: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate
    • Alias: feed-grade-k2h2po4
    • Einecs: 231-913-4
    • Mininmum Order: 1 g
    • Factroy Site: Yudu County, Ganzhou, Jiangxi, China
    • Price Inquiry: sales3@ascent-chem.com
    • Manufacturer: Ascent Petrochem Holdings Co., Limited
    • CONTACT NOW
    Specifications

    HS Code

    873923

    Product Name Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate
    Chemical Formula KH2PO4
    Appearance White crystalline powder
    Purity ≥98.0%
    Solubility In Water Fully soluble
    Molecular Weight 136.09 g/mol
    Ph Value 1 Percent Solution 4.2–4.7
    Phosphorus Content 22.7% min
    Potassium Content 28.7% min
    Moisture Content ≤0.2%
    Application Nutritional supplement in animal feed
    Heavy Metals Content <10 ppm
    Arsenic Content <5 ppm
    Hazard Classification Non-hazardous
    Storage Conditions Store in a cool, dry place

    As an accredited Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.

    Packing & Storage
    Packing 25 kg white plastic woven bag with blue labeling, marked “Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate,” moisture-proof and securely sealed.
    Shipping Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate is shipped in sealed, moisture-proof bags or containers, typically ranging from 25 to 50 kilograms. Packages are clearly labeled with product information and safety instructions. Transport is conducted in compliance with local and international regulations, avoiding direct sunlight, moisture, and contamination during shipment and storage.
    Storage Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate should be stored in a cool, dry, well-ventilated area, away from moisture, heat, and incompatible substances. Keep the container tightly closed and properly labeled. Ensure storage away from acids and strong oxidizing agents. Protect from direct sunlight and sources of ignition. Regularly inspect packaging for damage or leaks to maintain product integrity and safety.
    Application of Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate

    Purity 98%: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate with 98% purity is used in poultry feed formulations, where it ensures efficient phosphorus and potassium uptake for optimal growth rates.

    Particle Size <100μm: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate with particle size less than 100μm is used in aquaculture diets, where it provides homogeneous nutrient distribution and enhanced digestibility.

    Solubility 100 g/L: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate with solubility of 100 g/L is used in liquid feed supplements, where it offers rapid dissolution for consistent mineral fortification.

    pH Value 4.5: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate with pH value 4.5 is used in ruminant premixes, where it maintains feed stability and prevents nutrient loss due to alkalinity shifts.

    Stability Temperature up to 300°C: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate stable up to 300°C is used in pelleted feed manufacturing, where it retains nutrient effectiveness after high-temperature processing.

    Moisture Content <1%: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate with moisture content less than 1% is used in concentrated mineral blends, where it minimizes caking and ensures product flowability during storage and transport.

    Water Insoluble Matter ≤0.1%: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate with water insoluble matter not exceeding 0.1% is used in high-value livestock feeds, where it guarantees clarity and compatibility in solution-based applications.

    Arsenic Content ≤10 ppm: Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate with arsenic content not exceeding 10 ppm is used in regulated feed markets, where it meets critical safety and feed additive guidelines.

    Free Quote

    Competitive Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate 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@ascent-chem.com.

    We will respond to you as soon as possible.

    Tel: +8615365186327

    Email: sales3@ascent-chem.com

    Get Free Quote of Ascent Petrochem Holdings Co., Limited

    Flexible payment, competitive price, premium service - Inquire now!

    Certification & Compliance
    More Introduction

    Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate: A Responsible Approach to Animal Nutrition

    Introduction

    On our production line, Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate stands out as more than a commodity—it shapes the way many farms approach livestock nutrition. Inside any facility like ours, this compound follows a precise and carefully observed process, right from raw material selection to packaging. Experience in chemical manufacturing shows us that the quality of phosphorus and potassium sources plays a direct role in animal health, as well as farm productivity. Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate, commonly designated as KH2PO4, is produced from purified phosphate rock and refined potassium salts. Yet, its purpose extends beyond meeting a sales order. It supports the real-world performance of poultry, swine, and ruminants raised across a range of environments.

    Why Focus on Feed Grade?

    From the outside, various grades of potassium dihydrogen phosphate might look similar. But inside the plant, each product batch behaves differently because of the specifications we build into the process. For animal feeds, purity and safety must come before all other features. Contaminant levels, moisture content, insolubles, and even the crystalline structure need close oversight, since livestock consume this material directly through mixed feed. On our end, this means every lot receives heavy scrutiny in terms of heavy metals, fluorides, and sodium. Deviations can compromise not only animal welfare but also the trust of feed integrators who depend on reliable product.

    During inspection, workers sample at each stage, not just the final drum or bag. ICP-OES, X-ray analysis, and titration verify phosphate and potassium levels, confirming that phosphorus remains within the nutritional range needed for feed. Experience tells us that the best feed grade product supports digestibility and minimises antinutritional impacts. We avoid using technical-grade or fertilizer-grade product in livestock applications; these often introduce contaminants and reduce the feed’s palatability. Over the years, this distinction has made feed manufacturers loyal to sources that can provide certificates showing tighter controls.

    Composition and Handling in the Plant

    On a chemical level, potassium dihydrogen phosphate offers a balanced blend of potassium and phosphorus, both essential for muscle growth, energy transfer, and bone development in animals. The model typically produced in our facility originates as high-purity white powder or granules, with total phosphate content (as P) and potassium (as K) closely approaching their theoretical maximum. Any deviation—like a gritty, greyish powder—usually means a subpar batch, so we always set aside such materials for industrial rather than feed applications.

    In packaging areas, you won’t see dusty or lumpy product making its way to feed customers. Even minor caking means the material saw unwanted moisture or improper storage and is immediately isolated. Packaging for animal feed differs from technical or fertilizer grades, with greater attention to avoiding ingress of contaminants. On the chemical floor, we learned long ago that open exposure to air or unlined bags can pick up ammonia or carbonate residues, which alter both product quality and regulatory compliance.

    Comparing Feed Grade with Other Grades

    In conversations with feed millers and farm managers, most express confusion about the difference between feed grade and industrial or fertilizer potassium dihydrogen phosphate. Technical or fertilizer-grade products often emphasize only the presence of nutrients, with little focus on purity. Heavy metal content such as lead, arsenic, or cadmium, which sometimes goes undetected in lower grades, remains strictly regulated in feed applications. Using fertilizer potassium phosphate exposes herds to persistent trace elements that eventually accumulate, affecting animal health and, in turn, entering the food chain.

    Industrial grades remain common in non-feed settings like water treatment or fire suppression, where tolerances for impurities run higher. Some plants may even use recycled phosphates as raw materials for these applications, a step we do not take for feed grade material. Each year, stricter standards emerge because food safety risks remain fresh in the public’s memory. As a manufacturer, we view this regulatory attention as reasonable. Adhering to these higher standards requires more investment on our part, extending from purification stages through quality control.

    Our own data shows that monitored impurities stay far below national guidelines, a result not possible using generic fertilizer sources. Reliable feed grade product must meet strict levels not only for phosphorus and potassium but also for fluorine, sodium, and heavy metals—parameters that only frequent batch testing can ensure. Fertilizer grades contain variances in solubility or batch-to-batch consistency, increasing the risk of improper animal dosing and nutritional imbalances.

    How Our Feed Grade Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate is Used in the Field

    Practical trials set healthy skepticism at ease, and farmers share feedback during feed evaluation programs. Most commonly, potassium dihydrogen phosphate blends with corn, soybean meal, and mineral premixes. Its solubility means it disperses quickly in mash and pellet feeds, supplying phosphorus for energy metabolism and potassium for muscle function. In broilers, higher digestible phosphorus improves feed conversion ratios and supports skeletal strength. As many producers cut back on fishmeal and bone meal, reliance on mineral phosphates only grows. Accurate, reliable potassium dihydrogen phosphate meets these gaps.

    Historical data from our partners confirms that even marginal differences in phosphorus bioavailability alter growth rates and bone density. Over-supplementation pushes phosphorus runoff into manure, risking regional waterway pollution; under-supplementation stunts growth and increases morbidity. We rely on laboratory and animal trial results to fine-tune dose levels and particle size. For ruminants, the consistent microgranule distribution allows for uniform mixing without segregation in TMR feeds. In swine and layer operations, it often enters at a fixed stage during diet formulation, and our technical support staff often advises on inclusion rates based on changing crop nutrient levels.

    Focus on Safety, Traceability, and Transparency

    Every year, we receive questions about raw material origin and traceability. Concerns run especially high in regions with strict food security policies. Feeding studies and compliance checks remain routine here. We find it impossible to maintain reputation and relationships without full disclosure—from mineral source through downstream distribution. Documentation includes batch numbers, analysis protocols, and residue testing for every shipment. That attention to traceability calls for production systems that handle no other grades on the same lines or, where co-production occurs, require deep cleaning and downtime between runs. Our years producing for European and North American markets taught us that multinational firms expect nothing less.

    Handling animal feed phosphates means accountability. In our facilities, every lot of potassium dihydrogen phosphate intended for feed gets its certificate of analysis, not as a bureaucratic step but as the record of our work. Frequent independent lab verifications supplement in-house data. Our staff receives regular training on analytical methods and contamination prevention. In the unlikely event of a recall—not yet necessary, but always possible—the root cause will almost certainly trace back to a small change or oversight. Our process design builds in redundancies to prevent such error.

    Quality Assurance and Continuous Improvement

    The philosophy inside our plant puts product quality above short-term costs. Any variation in pH, moisture content, or phase purity can undermine the nutritional value and safety of the product. Our analytical chemists use IC, HPLC, and XRF techniques to track contaminants and verify conformance with all relevant standards. Not once have we found value in relaxing release criteria, even when costs rise due to energy pricing or raw material volatility. In our opinion, only a rigorous quality strategy maintains long-term trust.

    We run feed-specific lines separately from our industrial and fertilizer lines. This reduces the chance of cross-contamination and allows for a more tailored approach to sanitation. Stringent cleaning protocols and chemical validation between batches further prevent liability issues. Environmentally, we pursue greener processing by optimising water reuse and installing closed-loop waste capture systems, not out of regulatory burden but because we live amidst the communities that ultimately use our product.

    Animal nutritional science changes quickly, and our technical teams keep close contact with end users. Feedback drives adjustments in product spec, shipping containers, and even labeling. When a customer notices a caking issue during a wet season, for instance, our R&D responds by re-examining moisture barriers in bags or exploring different anti-caking agents—always selecting food-safe types that pass residue testing.

    Meeting Regulatory and Consumer Expectations

    Food and feed regulations have become more comprehensive, reflecting heightened awareness of chemical residues and trace element risks. For feed grade potassium dihydrogen phosphate, national and regional authorities require regular documentation and product disclosures. On our end, every export shipment comes with compliance documentation aligning with destination country requirements. Our process audits, both internal and third party, confirm that our records match on-paper claims. Any deviation prompts swift investigation and re-training.

    Transparency improves more than compliance; it builds commercial relationships. Customers—many of them integrated food companies—trust that our certificates reflect true chemical and microbial quality. We never mask off-spec lots behind blended consignments, because any effort to hide substandard product reaches the end user sooner or later.

    Consumer concerns shape manufacturer priorities too. Animal nutritionists increasingly request disclosure not just of analytes but details such as crystal morphology, particle size, and the absence of GMOs or irradiation steps. Traceability from mine to finished feed continues to grow in importance, and our record-keeping, which now includes blockchain-supported chain-of-custody for select markets, keeps moving forward in response.

    Environmental Responsibility and Future Directions

    Phosphate mining and processing can impact the surrounding environment. On our site, this reality guides our process design. Every year, environmental audits inspect for wastewater discharge, phosphate runoff, and solid waste disposal. By refining purification stages and recycling process water, we have reduced total water usage and phosphate loss to levels below industry averages. While these investments increase cost, we see them as non-negotiable.

    We look beyond compliance to anticipate future regulatory developments. If the global trend toward phosphate recovery from livestock waste continues, feed mineral supplement manufacturers may need to source some inputs from secondary, recycled sources. Our pilot trials already investigate whether these materials can match the quality and safety of primary mineral sources. Only after comprehensive testing, including animal feeding studies, will such approaches enter commercial production.

    Aside from reduced natural resource consumption, responsible manufacturing means regular investment in worker health and safety. Our chemical handling protocols, personal protective equipment, and ventilation controls benefit our employees and support our broader commitment to community stewardship. Our teams know that the quality of feed mineral phosphates depends as much on people as on machines.

    Risks of Substandard Product—A Manufacturer’s Experience

    We have encountered feed manufacturers who try to save costs by accepting lower-priced technical or fertilizer grade potassium dihydrogen phosphate. The risks involved—ranging from heavy metal toxicity to reduced nutrient uptake—have real consequences. Stories filter back: poor hatch rates in broilers, stiff-limbed piglets, or unexplained poor growth in dairy herds. Investigations frequently point to contaminated or inconsistent mineral sources. In the strongest cases, local authorities impose recall orders or even restrict sales until causes are found. On our end, these events reinforce why feed grade integrity matters, pushing us to keep our own standards higher.

    For us, it is not only about regulatory compliance or protecting our market position. Responsible supply chains support farmers, veterinarians, food companies, and ultimately, consumers. Only by upholding strict quality and safety standards at the manufacturing source can the risks beyond our plant gates be managed.

    Conclusion: Commitment to Quality in Every Batch

    Continuous improvement defines life inside our feed grade potassium dihydrogen phosphate plant. Over time, each batch reflects lessons learned—not just from regulatory guidance, but from animal nutrition trials, customer feedback, and our own day-to-day operations. Quality means anticipating risks before they affect the final product, keeping full transparency from mineral source to packaged bag, and investing in the people and processes that make these minerals safe.

    Our daily work links chemistry to agriculture, impacting every layer from the fields where ingredients are grown to the eggs and meat delivered to the dinner table. It is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and one that grounds each decision, investment, and improvement in the production and delivery of feed grade potassium dihydrogen phosphate.

    Top