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Revision as of 15:43, 15 October 2018
LUX Levels
First measurements taken from the LED's was when they had the 'rainbow' function loaded. Meaning the lights cycled through the colours of a rainbow. We applied this test so we could determine which colour gave the highest Lux. Which established that purple is the 'optimal' colour to use peaking at 1100 lux, confirming what our human practices has revealed when visiting various hydroponic facilities.
Next we loaded the Arduino with a programmed in 'purple' colour. This measurement stabilised at roughly 1300 lux. Leading us to believe we could tweak this light level even more. therefor we tried different preset colours; Blue, Green, Red, White, Blue proved to be the highest. Realising that the LED's manage colours by producing different quantities of Blue, Green and Red light we figured we may be able to create an optimum between these colours hopefully improving on the preset Blue. Which meant we couldn't use a preset library and would have to define the light levels of the primary colours manually.
Before starting we defined the brightness of each colour as an 8 bit integer (265 light levels). The most obvious place to start was to turn all the primary colours up to 265. Giving white light which performed worse than the preset Blue and white. Therefor we created purple via Blue, Red: 265. Which also proved to be less than the preset blue. Figure 1.0 show the results from these measurements.
Therefor thinking that the preset Blue was actually our maximum we attempted one more test. Holding Blue at a constant 265 but varying Red from 0-265 and plotting the results. We discovered that there is a peak Lux peak when the Red is at a light level of 129. Next we tried Blue:265, Red:129 and varied green from 0-265. Which appeared to have a detrimental effect on the light intensity. Figure 1.1 shows the relationship between these colours
Figure 1.0; Graph displaying the light intensity from varying the wavelengths (colour)
UP TO
SEEDS CAN BE GROWN
IN HYDROPONICS
APPROXIMATELY
KWH OF POWER ANNUALLY
USED TO POWER SYSTEM
PROVIDES UP TO
LUX OF LIGHT
TO GROW SEEDS
CONTAINS
INDIVIDUALLY ADDRESSABLE
LOW-POWER LED'S
Stage Two
Green light experiment
In an attempt to confirm purple light is optimal wavelength for growing Rocket we ran a simple experiment. Using off cut ply wood we created a barrier which was placed inside the hydroponics effectively blocking the light, Figure 2.0 shows the dividers used. This allowed us to programme the Arduino to emit green and purple light independently, the light intensities were measure at 200, 1700 Lux respectively (code can be found here). Seeds were then placed in two 96 well racks, one green (A), one purple (B). They were then left to germinate for a week.
It was expected that there would be more germinations from rack B, and from the photos below we can see a comparison from racks A and B; 6, 22 respectively. However the shoots in A are significantly taller as they are straining for light. Whereas the Rocket in rack B is more uniform.
REFERENCES & Attributions
Attributions: Luke Waller, Umar Farooq, Connor Trotter