Greenhouse Artificial Lighting Control
Other conference contribution, 2012

Industrial scale greenhouses have, during the last decade, reached a high level of automation. However, lighting control is in general still controlled manually because of the type of lamps (High Pressure Sodium) that are used. With High Brightness LEDs about to reach the market today sufficiently high power for greenhouse grown crops can be achieved, and this opens up for advanced lighting control. Optimized control will, however, be a difficult task because the needs of the plants differ between individual plants, crops, time of the day, time of the growth cycle, temperature, and of course the natural ambient light. In this approach to this problem we distinguish four different control loops: growth control, ambient light compensation, light stress detection and recovery, and spectrum optimization, where the focus of this work is on the latter two. In particular it is shown here that light induced photoinhibition, decreasing photosynthetic yield and potentially damaging the plants, can be remotely detected in a light environment.

Author

Torsten Wik

Chalmers, Signals and Systems, Systems and control

Anna-Maria Carstensen

Chalmers, Signals and Systems, Systems and control

Tessa Pocock

Proceedings 15th Nordic Process Control Workshop

130-132
978-87-643-0946-1 (ISBN)

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Energy

Subject Categories

Other Biological Topics

Biophysics

Control Engineering

Signal Processing

ISBN

978-87-643-0946-1

More information

Created

10/7/2017