Two optimal control strategies for carbon dioxide (CO ) enrichment in greenhouse tomato crops have been developed. One uses pure CO from a storage tank and the other uses CO contained in the exhaust gases of boilers burning natural gas. The optimal strategies maximize the "nancial margin between cro
SE—Structures and Environment: Optimal Control Strategies for Carbon Dioxide Enrichment in Greenhouse Tomato Crops, Part II: Using the Exhaust Gases of Natural Gas Fired Boilers
✍ Scribed by Z.S. Chalabi; A. Biro; B.J. Bailey; D.P. Aikman; K.E. Cockshull
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 258 KB
- Volume
- 81
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1537-5110
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Optimized control strategies for carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) enrichment of greenhouse tomato crops using CO 2 from the exhaust gases of boilers burning natural gas are presented. In one group of strategies, the heat produced during CO 2 generation which exceeds the immediate heat requirement of the greenhouse is stored as hot water and used subsequently for heating. The simulations show that, use of optimal control can increase the financial margin of crop value over the combined expenditure on gas used for CO 2 and heating by £2Á3 m À2 (11%) when heat is not stored and by £4Á9 m À2 (24%) when heat is stored, compared with enriching with CO 2 only when heating is required. A 30% increase in gas price reduced the financial margin by 11%, whereas a 30% increase in tomato price increased the margin by 40%. The capacity of the heat store places a limit on the amount of heat that can be stored and consequently on the amount of natural gas that can be burnt and the associated amount of CO 2 produced during the day. The optimum size of heat store is 20 Â 10 À3 m 3 per unit greenhouse area.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES