Superdispersive iron, cobalt and copper nanocrystalline powders were synthesized in a water-ethanol medium by the reduction method using sodium borohydride as a reducing agent and carboxymethyl cellulose as a stabilizer (for Fe and Co nanoparticles). Transmission electron microscopy micrographs and x-ray diffraction analyses of the freshly prepared nanocrystalline powders indicated that they were in a zerovalent state with particle sizes ranging from 20 to 60 nm. The soybean seeds were treated with an extra low nanocrystalline dose (not more than 300 mg of each metal per hectare) and then sowed on an experimental landfill plot consisting of a farming area of 180 m2. This pre-sowing treatment of soybean seeds, which does not exert any adverse effect on the soil environment, reliably changed the biological indices of the plant growth and development. In particular, in laboratory experiments, the germination rates of soybean seeds treated with zero valent Cu, Co and Fe were 65, 80 and 80 percent, respectively, whereas 55 percent germination was observed in the control sample
in the field experiment, for all of the nanoscale metals studied, the chlorophyll index increased by 7-15 percent and the number of nodules by 20-49 percent compared to the control sample, and the soybean crop yield increased up to 16 percent in comparison with the control sample.