The present disclosure relates to an apparatus and method for autonomous Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA), including without limitation for the purpose of cultivation of organic produce and other organic or natural products and in vertical farming applications. The disclosed apparatus and method can also be utilized for more general application in the fields of agriculture, material handling, and warehousing, including without limitation, modular pallet warehousing.
Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA) is an evolving technique for the precision cultivation of organic produce through the artificial control of influential environmental factors. An appeal to facilitate the desirable outcomes of growth, this type agriculture may require the regulation of parameters pertaining to atmospheric, nutritional, spatial, or electromagnetic qualities. In doing so, a precise understanding of an organic system's overall production with respect to time is much more attainable. Systems like these can vary in size, ranging from a household appliance, to a standard freight shipping container, to a 10,000 square-meter warehouse, to a multi-hectare greenhouse. CEA systems are typically equipped with a general selection of actuators and sensors to monitor and control the environment.
In recent times, the technique has seen market potential in the cultivation of leafy or herbal produce, but the method has historically also suited for other organic applications, such as production of ornamentals, fungi, simple organisms, and protein sources. CEA offers the appeal of being resistant to growth-inhibiting factors, such as droughts, famine, floods, or winters. Because of this resiliency, consistent, year-round production is possible for a wide range of geographic scenarios, including urban, desert, artic, and deep space regions.
Typically, CEA systems running at a commercial capacity require a wide range of manual tasks to be performed by farmhands on a daily basis. These responsibilities may include the harvesting, cleaning, creation, inspection, and moving of product, the maintenance, sensing, control, and logistical planning of the environment, and the analysis of any data that may be subsequently collected. Despite being computer-controlled and with sensory feedback, CEA systems have many logistical points of failure that require technical skills from the farmhands in order to maintain. Appropriately so, commercial CEA systems are sometimes referred to as “plant factories” for their resemblances to manufacturing environments.
In industries pertinent to the distribution of inventory, autonomous warehousing has grown to prominence with the notion of a distributed robotic network to satisfy the last-mile issue that is often faced within large centers. In the 1970's, Autonomous Storage and Retrieval (ASRS) systems rose to prominence and were complimented with general conveyance of varying complexity to create semi-autonomous zones within the warehouse through the use of a manual crane operator. Over decades of innovation, fully autonomous warehousing has seen continued interest due to improved accessibility of affordable, functional robotic resources, such as actuators, sensors, embedded hardware, and control algorithms. New embodiments and methods include a fleet of freely-driven robots within a warehouse that have created further evolution in automation, now looking towards topics of dextrous manipulation, rich image classification, and swarm optimization.
Despite the prevalence in autonomous mechanization that has benefitted warehousing, few solutions exist that are appropriate for CEA embodiments. Tasks in CEA systems are largely manual, requiring redundant work from human laborers. These tasks, often worsened by day-long repetition, excessive amounts of walking, and the frequent use of vertical lifts, all attribute to a significant portion of operational expenses for a CEA. As reported in Newbean Capital's 2015 white paper, “Robotics and Automation in Indoor Agriculture,” CEAs in the vegetative green industry spend about 26% of their operational expenses on human labor, second to electricity at 28%. Because a significant portion of resources are dedicated to accessing manual labor, it is difficult for CEA operators to justify committing even more resources to the meticulous capture and logging of data. A consequence to this, optimization suffers, and little may be done to reduce operating expenses in areas such as electrical, nutritional, and water usages.
A growing number of specialized systems have been proposed in the interest of improving the operation of CEA systems. For example, Just Greens' US2014/0137471 embodiment employs the use of a fabric-like material of particular absorptive and wicking parameters that may be mounted onto a variety of tensioning and conveying systems, but is best suited for aeroponic environments where suspended roots are given adequate clearance to grow. As another example, Living Greens Farm's U.S. Pat. No. 9,474,217B2 embodiment contains a mobile track system for large A-frames containing plants to transverse along, as well as a mobile irrigation system, but it does not offer irrigation methods differentiated from aeroponics. Lastly, Urban Crop Solutions' WO2017012644(A1) describes an industrial plant growing facility, but limits scope to the cultivation only of green produce within flat, off-the-shelf trays. No standardization exists which offers broad versatility and inspection in a CEA environment for varying applications.
As these mentioned embodiments do bring improvements to CEA in practice, their function is often very specific to the type of produce that is being cultivated and would require substantial capital investment to convert infrastructure for alternative forms of agriculture. In addition, some embodiments make frequent requirement for workers to operate in precarious situations that may involve carrying a large, potentially wet, cumbersome pallet of produce on ladders or scissor lifts. Lastly, all of these inventions do not facilitate the measurement of produce quality at a particular site of production without first requiring substantial manipulation from a human, or automated mechanism, to deliver the organic material of interest to a stationary sensory station.
Therefore, for the sake of worker safety, production efficiency, and quality of data acquisition, there exists a growing need to facilitate the distributed handling and transport of material within CEA systems. More specifically, a need is present for an autonomous handling and transport system that manipulates units of material of particular form factor to a new destination within a CEA system.
The invention disclosed within contemplates an apparatus and method for autonomous inventory management for applications particular to CEA. The system, generally consisting of a plurality of tray assemblies (40) configured linearly within a plurality of track assemblies (18) within a rack (11) within an environmentally-controlled environment, may receive autonomous forceful input from a carriage-mounted manipulator (79) to add, subtract, index, or transfer tray assemblies (40) within the growing environment (10).
The template frame (41), having features for compressive or tensile input along a serial chain of the like, orients onto a pair of tracks (19) of at least one track assembly (18) with low-friction bearing surfaces that are affixed to the template frame (41). A tag (47), consisting of an RFID chip or optical feature, allows for tracking from an inventory management system. Fasteners on the template frame (41) accept a frame insert (40) derivation that is pertinent to the particular CEA application of interest. An indexing face for the forceful input and manipulation from a carriage-mounted manipulator (79) allow the autonomous handling of product.
The frame insert (40), having mating features for orienting and affixing to the fasteners on a template frame (41), may be configured for a variety of scenarios that are pertinent to the particular CEA task. For example, one embodiment of a frame insert (40) may include a rigid frame along with tensioned fabric principally intended as a growing media for short, leafy or herbal produce. In another embodiment, the frame insert (40) may include an electronic enclosure to facilitate tasks such computation, energy generation and storage, wireless communication, controls, and sensing. Additional embodiments of the frame insert (40) may be configured for applications that are largely pertinent to CEA organic product, such as ornamental crops, medicinal crops, plants requiring anchoring at the base, vines, fungi, roots, simple organisms, carbohydrates, fats, and animal protein sources.
The track (19), having a plurality of flats that are parallel to the horizon, facilitates linear motion by providing a bearing surface for at least one low-friction mechanism on a template frame (41) to commute. In the preferred embodiment, two tracks (19) are oriented to be mirrored about a center plane perpendicular to the horizon within the rack (11) and do not provide a significant contribution to the structural integrity of the structure. In alternative derivations, the track (19) may be configured with multiple steps for additional mobile bodies to linearly move independently of one another, features for the confinement of mobile bodies, features for electrical or fluidic channels, or features for mounting hardware.
The track (19) may be configured as a track assembly (18) to achieve various functions pertinent to a specialized CEA system. For example, an embodiment illustrated herein contemplates an aeroponic configuration in which a flexible sheet (13) is formed and affixed to fit between a hat and track (19). Supporting hardware, such as aeroponic modules, a fluidic drain, a fluidic inlet, and at least two bulkheads and stiffeners are incorporated into said track assembly (18) embodiment. In another embodiment, a low pressure fluidic system may be derived consisting of a flexible sheet (13) to function as a channel for waste fluids, a fluidic drain and inlet, and fluidic emitters ( ) to deliver a chemical solution to tray assemblies (40). In exemplary embodiments, a track assembly (18) may be configured for applications relevant to the production of ornamentals crops, medicinal crops, plants requiring anchoring at the base, vines, fungi, roots, simple organisms, carbohydrates, fats, and protein sources.
In accordance with CEA system design, the apparatus may include peripherals to assist in regulating environmental parameters. A fertigation system may use a combination of pumps, solenoids, filters, chemical reservoirs, and sensors to regulate and distribute a fluid of nutritional significance throughout the grow environment and more directly to tray assemblies (40). A lighting module can be used to provide supplemental light to living organisms, preferably through color and intensity-specified LED modules, and facilitate desirable growth on each tray assembly (40). Forced convective air flow may be included to ensure proper mixing of gasses, to improve thermal distribution, and to redirect undesired moisture away from plant canopies. In continuation of said embodiment and common knowledge, the apparatus is confined within an environmentally-controlled enclosure and is equipped with an air quality unit for the monitoring and regulation of atmospheric parameters within the grow environment ( ). These parameters may include the active control of relative humidity, temperature, particulate frequency and size through mechanical filtration, pathogen through UV treatment, and carbon dioxide supplementation. Contents within the enclosure are physically isolated from an outside environment and undergo a minimal number of air exchanges, thus satisfying the function as a CEA system. Enclosure embodiments may fit the form factor found in industrial warehousing, shipping containers, and greenhouses while still benefitting from the embodiment of this invention.
Exemplary embodiments are generally pertinent to the apparatus and method of autonomous inventory management in CEA systems through the active input of one or more carriage-mounted manipulators (79). In one embodiment, which is described in this document with the intent for illustration, an automated inventory management system is described for environments relevant to the cultivation of leafy or herbal produce inside facilities that are configured over multiple layers of plants grown within tray assemblies (40). In function, the manipulator (82) may navigate to a first location of interest, extend its linear extensor 0 and perform a grasping maneuverer by closing its clamps (86), forcibly push tray assemblies (40) configured within a track assembly (18), and insert said tray assembly (40) into a new respective location within a track assembly (18) within a rack (11), or processing line. In the preferred embodiment, the manipulator (82) may perform retrieval, indexing, and insertion functions to tray assemblies (40) within the growing environment (10), and may optionally operate tray assemblies (40) to or from a processing line.
It is to be understood that at least some of the figures and descriptions of the invention have been simplified to illustrate elements that are relevant for a clear understanding of the invention, while eliminating, for purposes of clarity, other elements that those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate may also comprise a portion of the invention. However, because such elements are well known in the art, and because they do not facilitate a better understanding of the invention, a description of such elements is not provided herein.
One preferred embodiment of the present invention, as depicted in
As alluded to in the background section, vertical farms are burdened with human labored tasks. In incorporating a manipulator (82) with the wide range of functions possible by the template frame (41), laborious tasks, such as handling trays, sterilization, sensing, and data logging may be completely automated by machines along a processing line. Doing so reduces the need for human intervention in the growing environment (10), thus advancing towards autonomous controlled environment agriculture.
In another preferred embodiment, as shown in
As the linear guides (12) are located at opposite ends of the rack (11) shown in
In another preferred embodiment, the manipulator (82), shown in
As shown
In one preferred embodiment, as shown in
As depicted in
Other contemplated embodiments, as shown in
Other contemplated embodiments of the template frame (41) comprise features such as solar panels (59) that may provide power to be stored in a battery (64). In one embodiment depicted in
The above description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the invention. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles described herein can be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, it is to be understood that the description and drawings presented herein represent a presently preferred embodiment of the invention and are therefore representative of the subject matter which is broadly contemplated by the present invention. It is further understood that the scope of the present invention fully encompasses other embodiments that may become obvious to those skilled in the art and that the scope of the present invention is accordingly limited by nothing other than the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119 §(e) of the earlier filing date of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/340,952, filed on May 24, 2016, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62340952 | May 2016 | US |