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Energy Gain in Passive Solar Greenhouses Due to CO2 Enrichment

Anastasia Martzopoulou, D. Vafiadis, V.P. Fragos

2020Energies20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The production cost of greenhouse cultivation depends mainly upon significant amounts of energy consumption in order to keep the optimum environmental condition for plant growth. Τhe expenditure on energy, either for heating or cooling, ranges between 30% to 60% of the total production costs, and any attempt to save energy will result in a positive effect on the potentiality of production accordingly, affecting the greenhouse product prices. Research has shown that CO2 enrichment in greenhouses significantly increases the yield of most indoor cultivation of plants of the C3 category. For these plants, when the CO2 concentration increases by three times above that of the atmosphere (380 ppm), the optimum plant growth temperature shifts higher by 5 °C to 10 °C reaching up to 30 °C to 32 °C. Therefore, huge amounts of solar energy can be captured inside the greenhouses, as the ventilation can be decreased. Alongside this, the use of a simple passive solar system consisting of plastic sleeves filled with water is considered to be an improved way to increase the energy inside greenhouses. In this work, three experimental trials were conducted to examine the benefit of the solar energy captured inside a greenhouse during CO2 enrichment at high temperatures. Finally, a modeling approach based on the heat loss equation was developed in order to establish the energy saving inside the greenhouses under the circumstances mentioned.

Topics & Concepts

GreenhouseEnvironmental scienceSolar energyEnvironmental engineeringGreenhouse gasWork (physics)Energy consumptionVentilation (architecture)Solar greenhouseYield (engineering)Production (economics)Greenhouse effectWaste managementAgricultural engineeringHorticultureMeteorologyEngineeringGlobal warmingEcologyClimate changeMechanical engineeringPhysicsThermodynamicsEconomicsMacroeconomicsBiologyElectrical engineeringGreenhouse Technology and Climate ControlPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsLight effects on plants