A test air induction nozzle was designed and manufactured to investigate how some design parameters affected the characteristics of the spray and how the spray characteristics influenced drift. A droplet-sizing technique which uses laser imaging rather than light scattering was used to characterize
PM—Power and Machinery: Modelling the Performance of Air-assisted Spraying on Artichoke
✍ Scribed by M.C. Rocamora; L. Val; M. Pérez
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 198 KB
- Volume
- 81
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1537-5110
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Conventional treatments on horticultural crops present a great lack of efficiency in applications and difficult penetration into dense crops. Horticultural sprayers should be able to undertake applications in a wide range of conditions, depending on the kind of crop, the pest and its location.
The aim of this work is to analyse the efficiency of an air-assisted sprayer on artichoke (Cynara scolymus L.), a horticultural crop whose density makes penetration of the plant canopy difficult. Tests of an oriented jet, airassisted sprayer for vegetables, with flexible ducts that lead the air towards the crop, have been performed in the field, using different positions of air outlets, types of nozzle and volume rates. Droplet population and coverage at different parts of the plant have been measured by means of image analysis. Generalized linear models have been used to model the sprayer performances.
Fan nozzles showed the best response to air assistance, achieving the highest deposits, especially in lowest leaves and on the undersides.
The flexibility of air ducts allows the outlets to be adjusted as required and a variable number of them to be employed on every row, with a resulting variation in the airflow. Better coverage and uniformity were achieved by directing three outlets per row.
Any decrease in deposits due to volume reduction was not proportional to the decrease in the applied volume and can be compensated with an adjustment of chemical doses.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Pesticide treatments in citrus and olive tree orchards in Spain make up 30 and 42% of the production costs. One reason for the high cost of these treatments is due to the high percentage loss of pesticide out of the tree, due to the globular shape of their canopies and to the application of chemical
A prototype of a liquid recycling and air circulation tunnel sprayer was tested in a peach orchard during two di!erent periods, and performance compared with that of an axial fan air-blast sprayer. The main technical aspects of the prototype are the high air#ow rate produced by four axial fans, the
In this paper, a hybrid model of a spray boom with cable suspension is developed. It combines an analytical modelling procedure with identi"cation techniques to cope with the limited power in the excitation actuator. The analytical model was used to optimize the passive boom suspension, while the id
A review of the performance of various designs of furrow openers of seed drills and planters under controlled laboratory conditions and also results of comparative performance of furrow openers in the laboratory and "eld are presented. The studies show in general that an increase in the rake and hor
The reducing cost of electronic control systems encourages the development of new pest control equipment that reduces the losses of product and improves the uniformity of the distribution. An electromechanical system capable of following-up the tree canopy at a constant distance was designed at Inst