Chloride, a salt form of the element, should not be confused with chlorine, the gas form of the element which is manufactured from chloride. It is often found in heavy concentrations in soil near an ocean. When nitrogen is in the soil, the micro fauna convert it to a form of ammonia that plants can easily absorb. Both elements combine easily, making the compound practical to use as a fertilizer.
Ammonium chloride is a medium-strength nitrogen fertilizer compared to other ammonium-based products. The nitrogen percentage is 25 percent, compared to ammonium nitrate at 33 percent and ammonium phosphate at 21 percent.
Ammonium chloride increased crop yields by up to 40 percent over crops with no chloride added, according to a multi-year study reported on by W. E. Thompson of the Oklahoma State University Department of Plant and Soil Sciences. The chloride also significantly increased the time it took for nitrogen to disappear from unlimed soil.
Ammonium chloride is also being studied for disease prevention. Tomatoes, beans and peppers were purposefully inoculated with harmful bacteria in an alkyl dimethyl benzyl ammonium chloride solution by Dr. Kayimbi Tubajika in 2009. Up to 50 percent of the bacteria were destroyed by the solution. This compares favorably to many of the other means of protecting consumers from bacteria.