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HLA Technology & Equipment
General Information
Greenhouses
Our 24-zone, 31,400 ft2 greenhouse
range was designed for a balance of durability, flexible-use and
high technology. It is flexible because technology that is expensive
and hard to repair/replace, such as in-floor heating or retractable
roofs, was not utilized. It has no permanent benches, blackcloth or
grow lights installed. Rather, each 1200 ft2 (108 m2)
greenhouse zone can be modified quickly according to need with
that equipment. It will be an easy facility to retrofit with new technology
in the coming decades, and the design includes abundant water, electric
and data utilities in anticipation of such upgrades.
The technology utilized was focused on solid construction
and excellent environmental control. The greenhouses are Nexus-built,
ridge and furrow design with 32-inch wide tempered glass glazing.
The superstructure is anodized aluminum with a 30-inch curtain wall.
Floors are cement with trench drains,
making for easier clean up and fewer pests. The greenhouses are heated
with radiant hot water pipes
and cooled using exhaust fans and evaporative
pads. No vents are present in the ridge or sidewalls (other than
fan shutters), allowing for reduced maintenance, reduced insect pressure
and a better seal from the weather. The air brought in for ventilation
comes from an open-topped plenum (a little hallway between the greenhouse
and corridor) so greenhouses
do not share or compete for air. Insects have to be 15 feet above
ground and over the greenhouse to get into the intake air stream.
Each greenhouse bay is independently controlled and monitored. All
that equipment in each bay makes for an expensive range, but allows
us to achieve 24 different environments--at any one time we are producing
crops of over 50 species, not including the dozens of specimen plants
in the collection greenhouse!
Growth Rooms
The growth rooms are used for research requiring a greater level of
environmental precision than a greenhouse, or for providing uniform
lighting so that seasonal light level doesn't effect a long-term experiment.
The two, 900 ft2 growth rooms have service features similar to the greenhouses
including compressed air, tap water, purified water, fertilizer solution
and environmental monitoring. Fifty-four metal halide and 36 high-pressure
sodium lamps (400-watts each) distribute 125 - 150 µmol/m2/sec of light
at bench top level. Racks housing light fixtures can be lowered to achieve
300 µmol/m2/sec. Chilled water exchangers are used to cool the room
and for dehumidification. Fifteen-percent of the air volume is continuously
exchanged with fresh air, and can be increased to accommodate ventilation
following pesticide application. Temperature capability range is 16
- 38° C independent of outdoor ambient temperature. Typical temperature
setpoints are 22° C during light period (16 hours) and 18° C
during the dark period. Temperature error is less than 1° C. Humidity
is purged through fresh air exchange. No humidification system is installed.
If rooms are nearly empty of plants, humidity is often too low. Fortunately,
high demand for this space usually keeps the rooms full. Since air is
particulate-filtered and positive pressure maintained, insect pressure
is greatly reduced--they have to be carried in on plants or people.
Limitations are high demand. Multiple users mean the rooms are not used to full capability because
a "compromise" environment is necessary to maintain success of all projects. The rooms are controlled
by Purdue Environmental Control Systems personnel, which means somewhat less responsiveness than
if greenhouse personnel were controlling them, particularly during after-hours. High heat load of
lights makes necessity for limit switches to cut off power to lights if cooling fails. Temperature
climbs to 130° F in thirty minutes otherwise.
HeadHouse
Within our 4,500 sq. ft. headhouse are greenhouse team offices,
lockers, team break area, potting room, fertilizer
injector cage, soils handling room, storage
rooms, shower facility for our pesticide
applicators, and pesticide storage room. The overhead
rolling door for receiving is equipped with a blower that creates
a curtain of warm air when loading/unloading perishables.
PolyHouse
The polyhouse was built with
the idea of creating an environment closer to the industry standard,
but with durability to match the rest of the facility. Our Jaderloon
polyhouse is 3,400m-sq. ft., with polycarbonate sidewalls and double-layer
polyethylene film over the arched frame. Posts, joists, and framing
are galvanized structural steel. The film is 6 mil thick with UV inhibition.
The environment is controlled by a Wadsworth
Envirostep Controller, and monitored with a redundant Priva sensor
for data tracking and alarming similar to our glass houses. It has
fan and evaporative pad cooling and radiant hot water heating. Sidewalls
are 14 feet high, with concrete foundation walls and gravel floors.
Fertilizer and domestic cold water are plumbed independently.
Coolers
Each compartment of 90 ft2 is controlled independently and alarmed. One
is outfitted with fluorescent lamp fixtures and shelves as a cold stress
and vernalization environment, and another a seed stratification chamber.
The other three are utilized for general storage, cold storage of flowers,
dormant woody branches, tubers and bulbs, and for teaching projects.
Growth Chambers
Thirty three chambers were purchased and installed in three areas
of the Agriculture campus as part of a decentralized multi-user facility
obtained through a $450 K National Science Foundation MRI grant plus
equivalent matching funds from Purdue University. For more information
on these chambers, please visit the College
of Agriculture Plant Growth Center page.
Tissue Culture Lab
The tissue culture lab consists of four rooms, totaling
1,809-ft2 (167 m2). A preparation room
has counters, equipment cabinets, dishwasher, sinks, refrigerators,
freezer, and two Getinge Castle Model 122 gravity steam sterilizers.
The transfer room has six laminar
flow hoods and is operated under positive pressure. Two culture
rooms are also under positive pressure for sanitary environment.
One contains 540-ft2 (50 m2) of shelf space lit with fluorescent lamps
for petri-dish culture, and the other contains shaker
tables for liquid culture and an additional 540-ft2 (50 m2) of
lighted shelf space.
Lab / Classroom Facility
In January 1999, renovation was completed on our old headhouse
building. Former offices and work areas were converted into an extra
laboratory classroom, along with asbestos removal and upgrade
of utilities. The classroom is 800-ft2 (74 m2), with an adjacent 170-ft2
(15.8 m2) preparation room complete
with cooler, sink, cabinets, and counter space.
Environmental Control Systems
Each of the greenhouse zones is controlled using Priva Computers sensors,
microprocessors, weather station and Precision 6 (version 1.09) software.
Weather station data of light, temperature, humidity, rain, wind speed
and wind direction allows the microprocessors to anticipate heating
and cooling requirements. This ability to anticipate need for heating
and cooling gives accurate temperature control while minimizing equipment
cycling. The computer calculates a heating requirement or a cooling
requirement to decide which, if any, equipment to activate. To make
this calculation, it determines
1) how far the measured temperature is from the setpoint
2) how long the temperature has been away from the setpoint
3) how fast it is changing
4) outdoor conditions
Different equipment may be on at one moment when the zone is 79-degrees
F than another moment when it is 79F, because the proportional control
calculation is anticipating based on the outside conditions and rate
of change.
The bottom line of all this sophisticated equipment is maintaining
the tight environmental control necessary for plant science research
and teaching. During winter and on cloudy, cool days in summer, we
can maintain temperatures within two degrees. On hot, humid days the
evaporative cooling can't keep up with cooling demand, and the best
we can achieve is nine degrees below outdoor temperature. The greenhouses
had no trouble handling the continuous sub-zero temperatures and record-setting
snowfall of January 1999. Venting with fans purges high humidity in
the greenhouse.
Sensors in the greenhouses measure temperature and humidity continuously
and record data points every 10 minutes to a host computer in the manager's
office. We can print out graphs and reports of environments for scientific
publication. We can also see graphs and reports of how many minutes
each piece of equipment was on. This has helped us learn how to use
the heating/cooling wisely, and can detect faulty equipment.
The computers also set off environmental alarms we’ve programmed.
If the alarms aren't acknowledged in the greenhouse or on the main computer,
the computer pages the manager. The main computer can be accessed with
a laptop computer plugged into a phone jack, or a wireless PDA, so the
manager can answer alarms remotely and fix most problems. Undoubtedly,
the alarming feature has saved experiments from being ruined on several
occasions. If the experiment involves uniquely bred plants, those plants
may be irreplaceable. If we lose a crop for HORT 101, we've lost
a teaching opportunity for those students forever.
Other Features
Clear water and fertilizer solutions are independently plumbed into
each greenhouse, and reverse-osmosis purified water plumbed into nearly
half of the greenhouses. Compressed air for oxygenating hydroponics
culture is in every greenhouse. Computer ports for portable computers
are also available in each greenhouse, allowing investigators to enter
data or make computations in the greenhouse. Web-cams can also be used
in these ports.
Fertilizer solution is injected into the hose stream using an Anderson
injector with J-Plus controller located in the headhouse. Two brass
fertilizer pumps (one as a spare) inject the fertilizer concentrate,
Scotts Excel 15-5-15 CalMag, into the water stream at a final solution
rate of 200-PPM nitrogen. An acid pump injects 96% sulfuric acid to
neutralize alkalinity and achieve a final solution pH of 6.0-6.2.
HLA Greenhouses: FAQs
How do we control temperature, humidity, light, irrigation?
TEMPERATURE
Heating in the greenhouses is done by several pieces of equipment that can come on independently or
simultaneously; likewise with cooling. Programming this progression is called "staging": a little
cooling or heating when only a little is necessary, full cooling or heating when reaching limits of
what the greenhouse can achieve. Without staging, large swings in temperature occur.
Heating stages are, in order of when they come on, 1) perimeter heat, 2) unit heater 1, and 3) unit
heater 2. We use steam from the university power plant to boil water in a boiler in our mechanical
room. Large pumps carry the hot water in a loop around the greenhouse facility, in large overhead
pipes in the corridors. Computerized valves allow hot water into greenhouse pipes as needed.
Cooling stages vary according to season. In summer they are: 1) evaporative pad shutter open and fan 1
low speed, 2) fan 2 low, 3) pad pump ON to wet pad, and 4) fans 1 & 2 high speed. In winter, the first
stage is gable shutter (in the roof peak) with fan 1 low. This is so outside air can be heated up and
mixed before reaching plants. Other cooling stages are the same except that the pad shutter and pump
are 'locked out' by the computer if the outside temperature is below 44F. Of course, in coldest days
of winter the first stage of cooling is sufficient. As higher stages of cooling come on, lower stages
also stay on.
The most difficult time to control temperature uniformly during spring and fall, when outdoor sunlight
levels are high but air temps are cold. Heat load builds in the greenhouse, but temperature inside
quickly drops when outside air is drawn in by cooling fans.
Temperature control range of our greenhouses can be described as:
- Summer: Lower range is 5-9°F below ambient outdoor temp if
above 85°F and RH above 50%, much cooler if temp and humidity
are low—as much as 20°F below ambient. Upper range is 25°F
above ambient in summer.
-
Winter: Lower range is as cold as you want to work in and not freeze the pipes. Upper range is 85°F day/75°F
night under worst cold/windy conditions.
HUMIDITY
Our humidity control is not sophisticated in that we have no “addification” such as fog nozzles that
other greenhouses have. We count on humidity being increased by plants transpiring, irrigation water
evaporating, evaporative pad usage and, of course, outdoor air being drawn in by ventilation. We
dehumidify using venting of indoor air in exchange for (hopefully) less humid outdoor air—called
“purging.” Computer performs purges when humidity rises above setpoint. One fan comes on low speed
and the gable shutter opens for 10 minutes, then waits 40 minutes before it is allowed to purge again,
if necessary. Unit heaters can be activated to heat incoming air to lower its relative humidity. RH
setpoints are usually 50-70%, depending on season, and—in the absence of a researcher’s requested
setpoint—our simplistic goal is to keep condensation from forming on glass, which could signal that
the environment is suitable for disease.
LIGHT
We add light using metal halide or sodium vapor fixtures provided by researchers, and reduce light
by using shade curtains. Photoperiod is lengthened using incandescent bulbs or, alternatively, closing
blackout curtains to shorten days. Light is measured from the weather station, not inside each zone.
Daytime outdoor light intensity varies from less than 100 µmol/m2/s on cloudy January days to 2000
umol/m2/s in summer. Glass only blocks a small percentage of this but superstructure casts shadows
so indoor levels of light are significantly lower, perhaps 20%.
Intensity of most HID lamps at a level of 2 meters above a greenhouse bench is 150 µmol/m2/sec, so it
does not reproduce summer levels. HID supplementation can be very significant winter months, especially
when activated for 16 or more hours.
Lights are plugged into timer outlets and controlled by timers rather than the computer system. Light
timers can be set on astronomical function to lengthen/shorten hours of operation for tracking natural
daylength. They were designed for use with either photoperiod (incandescent) or high intensity lamps,
but are suitable for other kinds of equipment as well, such as irrigation solenoids or air compressors.
Interior shade curtains are controlled by computer and can be activated to cover the greenhouse at a
specific time, by temperature, by sunlight level, or a combination of these. We use them primarily in
high-light season (April-October), having them cover when light exceeds 1000 µmol/m2/s, for example.
They provide 50% shading. Curtains are primarily for reducing solar heat load and secondly, reducing
water loss—only Arabidopsis and a few other crops would be damaged by high light itself. A solar filter
program acts as a “delay” to keep the curtain from opening and closing excessively on days of broken
clouds. Shade curtains are thermal curtains as well, and can be used to reduce radiation loss of heat
at night, saving energy. We use this feature only in the mist house, where soil temperatures drop well
below air temperature through radiation, reducing germination rate.
IRRIGATION
Irrigation can be provided by watering with a hose or with automated drip
systems, capillary mats, or overhead sprinklers. Researchers can choose
between tap water, reverse-osmosis purified water, or fertilizer solution.
Fertilizer solution is provided by a water-pressure-driven pump called
an injector because it injects a measured amount of concentrated fertilizer
into the tap water stream. Our fertilizer is 15-5-15 Miracle Gro formulation
with Ca, Mg, and minor elements, at a diluted strength of 200 ppm N.
The injector has another pump head that delivers concentrated sulfuric
acid to neutralize alkalinity of our tap water supply and reduce pH
to 6.0-6.2. For more specialized fertilization, fertilizer is provided
by portable injectors.
For automating irrigation, electronic solenoid valves are placed in the
line after a faucet that is pressurized (on), so that when the solenoid
gets the signal, it opens and water flows to the delivery system. We
use solenoids on timer outlets and have many wired to outputs of the
computer-control panels. The computer can activate the irrigation system
by timeclock, moisture sensor, or accumulated sunlight level.
What environmental interactions have we noticed when trying to control temperature, humidity, light, and irrigation?
High light affects temperature. Big time! We'd be toast without shading in summer - at or above ambient
outdoor all day long. In spring/fall, it's tricky to control temp when solar radiation heats up a zone,
because the ventilation air is still freezing cold.
High light affects irrigation. Much more watering in summer. Watering time doubles by late March from
late January; as soon as we activate shade curtains, irrigation frequency drops. High temperature
doesn't noticeably affect irrigation - a warm house in winter doesn't require a great deal more irrigation
than a cool one until the sun comes out.
Temperature affects relative humidity. Hence the term 'relative.' The same water vapor in the air at
75F has a much lower RH than at 55F. We’ve seen RHs soar in practically empty zones because of lowered
temperature setpoint; then humidity purging frequency increases according to its programming.
Temperature affects insects. We can slow or hasten metamorphosis in insect populations by changing
temperature (not always possible if research requires tight temperature control). This allows us to
time our applications of pesticides better. For example, many of our products don't work on larval
forms but do kill adults of the same insect species, so we hasten adulthood by adjusting temp, usually
upward.
Some interactions affect disease. We see seasonal incidence of diseases that are predictable by the
calendar, but not very predictable by the environmental graphs. A closer look may identify the right
combination of light, humidity, photoperiod, temperature that leads to these, and then allow us to
change the environment to reduce disease. Low light brings out diseases that may have been "masked,"
such as INSV in Arabidopsis.
High light affects surface radiation. Yes, the liquid thermometer
in your zone says 90F but the computer using the aspirated sensor in
a closed box says 75F. Measure the metal bench with an infra-red thermometer
and it says 110F, but the air is 75F! By the way, use that IR thermometer
on your plants' leaves and it says 72F. Why?
Irrigation affects temp, RH. We can see when our team has watered a
zone by the humidity blip on the graph. Relative humidity may suddenly
increase by 30% and last 2-5 hours. People swear the zone is too
hot after irrigation, but it’s just the RH creating the "heat index"
effect. Watering frequently means more purging occurs. Proper watering
keeps leaf surface temps cool, but what happens to leaf surface temp
if we miss watering that plant and it begins to wilt?
Irrigation affects nutrient uptake. Our clear water is not acidified,
so crops irrigated frequently with clear water may develop high root
zone pH, resulting in micronutrient deficiency. Water stress from several
days ago may only be evident today by yellow leaves from lack of nutrients,
whether using clear or fertilizer water.
What are the limitations of the greenhouses?
We struggle with this. It is our goal and firm belief that no faculty member will retire from our
department thinking, "If only our facility could have allowed me to _____." Anyway, here is our
priority ranked Top Sixteen List of Limitations:
- Poor cooling in summer: high heat/humidity can lead to thermal stress
- Low light in winter slows growth and increases disease
- Seasonal variability in light level hampers long-term experiments
- Clear water not acidified as is the fertilizer water
- Non-uniformity of light in greenhouse because of structural shading
-
Polyhouse environmental control equipment is controlled by a step controller rather than computer
control, meaning it can't use outdoor weather data to calculate heating and cooling requirement.
This results in our having to adjust the programming as seasons change more than we do the
computer-controlled greenhouses. With computer control, it could be our most controlled zone
because of its large volume.
- Poorly designed shade-curtain motors
- Poorly installed shade curtains and evaporative pads—we’ve repaired
- Shade curtains not easily accessible for repair
- Deionized water purifying system not running because of cost
- Lights not activated by computer
- Temperature gradients around zone—not formally documented, but exist
- Humidification passive. Active could be useful in winter.
- Water pressure can affect fertilizer delivery; one hose not enough to get it pumping fully
- Light timers very difficult to program
- No generators. I’m confident we’ll be all right, but would sleep better.
What are the capabilities/limitations of the Priva computer system?
We haven’t touched what the computer system can do. We are far more limited in time,
know-how, patience and creativity than the system is limited in capability. Realize that
optimizing environmental control often requires making a small change, waiting and observing,
making another small change, waiting and observing, then doing it all over again in the next
season because the programming will need to change according to time of year. I struggle
to name any current limitations.
Capabilities include:
- Anticipatory logic function for calculating what heating/cooling equipment needs to come on even before the temperature has moved beyond the setpoint.
- Summary screens for easy monitoring of the whole facility.
- Spare inputs so that sensors such as soil temperature probes or moisture probes can be installed and data recorded.
- Spare outputs for irrigation solenoids or other equipment.
- Equipment usage logging--we can track how many minutes each piece of equipment was activated each day.
- Customized program features that allow any output (equipment) to be turned on by any input (sensor).
- Override programming to manually override equipment ON or OFF.
- Pesticide programming allows us to ventilate prior to anyone coming into the building, improving safety.
- Four programmable periods of day rather than just day and night, with ramping of temperature for gradual change between periods. Allows us to use height-regulating environmental programming called DIF.
- Snow melt programs to reduce load on roof and disease preventing environmental programs.
- Graphing in color, down-loadable data, remote access to control computer for alarm response.
- Technical service experts who can dial in to the computer from Priva’s Canada headquarters and diagnose problems.
- Alarms that page-out to manager.
- Water monitoring for pH, EC
- Wireless access