This patent application claims priority from Italian patent application no. 102019000009603 filed on 20 Jun. 2019, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a cultivation system for plants.
In particular, the invention concerns the recovery of the liquid preferably based on fertiliser that, during the aeroponic feeding procedure, is sprayed towards the plants in a cultivation system preferably, but not necessarily, of the vertical farm type, to which the following discussion will make explicit reference without any loss of generality thereby.
As is well known, vertical-farm cultivation systems are structured to implement high-density cultivation processes for plants, such as plants/vegetables, in closed artificial environments generally free of soil/earth and sunlight. The plants are cultivated in dedicated shelves or trays mounted horizontally on support frames and are distributed on several cultivation planes overlapped at progressively increasing heights in relation to the support surface for the frames so as to extend the system, including in the vertical direction.
The plant cultivation processes carried out through the above-mentioned cultivation systems essentially involve feeding a fertiliser-based liquid into the cultivation planes in a controlled manner and, at the same time, lighting them using artificial light sources.
In some cultivation systems of the type described above, the liquid is fed to the plants by aeroponics. The aeroponic feeding essentially involves spraying/nebulising the fertiliser liquid towards the cultivation tray so as to wet the plants' roots.
Since during spraying, part of the sprayed fertiliser liquid is dispersed, i.e. it falls downwards, collection systems are generally provided in cultivation systems.
Some collection systems require the use of a hydraulic discharge system comprising collection tanks that are arranged below the cultivation planes and are provided with discharge openings on the bottom that are connected, in turn, to vertical discharge columns through external connections. The discharge system also comprises common liquid recovery containers that are arranged below the first cultivation plane and are hydraulically connected to the discharge columns to receive and store the liquid that flows out of the tanks. In use, the liquid contained in the tanks drains, by gravity, through the discharge openings towards the discharge columns that always convey it by gravity to the tanks below.
A first technical problem with the hydraulic discharge system described above is that it is particularly susceptible to clogging both at the discharge openings and in the connections. In addition to the cost of intervention, clogging can cause stagnation in the cultivation planes and, thus, increase the risk of fungal and bacterial formation and contamination of the plants.
A second technical problem with the hydraulic discharge system described above is that, in order to ensure correct discharge of the liquid, the tanks must be provided with a significant number of both discharge openings and vertical columns, conditions that affect both the overall size of the system and the cost of its implementation.
A third technical problem with the hydraulic discharge system described above is that the common collection tanks occupy a useful space that could potentially be occupied by the first cultivation plane, which is therefore attached at a predetermined minimum height that is greater than the height of the tank itself.
A known plant cultivation system is described, for example, in CN 109 699 488 A.
The Applicant has therefore conducted an in-depth study with the purpose of identifying a solution that is simple and economical to implement, which is able to overcome the above-mentioned technical problems.
This purpose is achieved by the present invention as it relates to a cultivation system, as disclosed in the corresponding appended claims.
This purpose is also achieved by the present invention as it relates to an operation method for a cultivation system, as defined in the appended claims.
This invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate a non-limiting embodiment thereof, wherein:
The present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings in order to allow a person skilled in the art to implement and use it. Various modifications to the described embodiments will be readily apparent to persons skilled in the art and the general principles described may be applied to other embodiments and applications without, however, departing from the protective scope of this invention, as defined in the appended claims. Accordingly, this invention is not to be limited in scope to the embodiments described and illustrated herein, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and characteristics disclosed and claimed herein.
The present invention is essentially based on the idea of positioning, in each cultivation plane, at least one suction duct at the nebulizing devices present in the cultivation plane so as to suck up the liquid that, during spraying, is dispersed by the nebulizing devices. The present invention is also based on the idea of positioning a liquid collection basin below the cultivation plane so as to collect the liquid dispersed during the spraying and to use the suction duct inside the basin to empty it.
According to an embodiment schematically shown in
The cultivation system 1 may be arranged inside a greenhouse container 2, preferably a closed one. The greenhouse container 2 may internally delimit the cultivation environment in which at least one cultivation system 1 is installed (in
It is understood that the greenhouse container 2 is not limited to the container with transparent walls of the type described above, but may comprise a container formed from walls of non-transparent material. In an embodiment wherein the cultivation system 1 is of the vertical-farm type, the greenhouse container has walls made of non-transparent material.
It is also implied that, in the discussion that follows, the term “plant” refers to any vegetal product, preferably for food use. The plants may comprise lettuces, greens, vegetables, and aromatic herbs, such as rocket, basil, mint, and the like. It is, in any case, implied that the above-mentioned invention is not limited to plants for food use of the type listed above, but may also be applied to cultivate other types of plants, generally cultivated in greenhouses of the conventional kind, such as flowers, plants, and the like.
In the following discussion, explicit reference will be made to vertical-farm cultivation systems 1 without any loss of generality thereby.
With reference to the embodiment shown in
The cultivation system 1 comprises one or more frames 3 arranged resting on a horizontal plane P (
With reference to
With reference to
According to the embodiment shown in the attached figures, the aeroponic feeding system 6 may comprise, for each cultivation plane Li, at least one delivery duct 7 that is arranged below the cultivation shelves 4 and extends along the cultivation plane Li, parallel to the extension direction K of the cultivation plane Li itself (
According to the embodiment shown in
The cultivation system 1 also comprises a suction system 12 that is structured so as to suck up the dispersed nebulised liquid in each of the cultivation planes Li. According to a preferred embodiment shown in
The suction system 12 also comprises, for each cultivation plane Li, at least one suction duct 15, which is arranged below the cultivation plane Li so as to be inside the liquid collection basin 14 and extends along a longitudinal axis B approximately parallel to the extension direction K and to the axis A (
According to a preferred embodiment shown in
According to one embodiment shown in
According to a preferred embodiment, the liquid collection basin 14 extends below the cultivation shelves 4 of a cultivation plane Li for the whole length of the same (along the direction K). The liquid collection basin 14 preferably comprises a thin layer in waterproof material that is very flexible. The Applicant found it convenient to use a film of waterproof fabric. For example, the Applicant found it convenient to use a flexible sheet based on plastic material (PVC) since it is extremely simple to mount and is economic. Laboratory tests performed by the Applicant found it was convenient to use, for example, a flexible, waterproof sheet called POLYPLAN Tent Opaque® marketed by SATTLER®.
The layer is preferably made of material that is not transparent to light, so as to prevent it from illuminating the plants' roots.
However, it remains understood that this invention is not limited to a layer of very flexible waterproof material. For example, according to one embodiment (not illustrated), the layer could be based on stiff material. For example, according to one embodiment (not illustrated), the layer could be based on metal or plastic material. For example, according to one embodiment (not illustrated), the liquid collection basin could comprise a stiff recipient or container, obtained, for example, through moulding, open above that extends below the cultivation shelf 4.
The liquid collection basin 14 is preferably, approximately, horizontal. With reference to the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The larger sides 14a that form the upper edges of the bottom wall and, preferably, the lower edges of the two walls 14b are, preferably, approximately coplanar (horizontally) and are basically arranged close to the, resting on the lower surface 4a of the cultivation shelves 4 at, approximately, the outer sides of the latter, so as to prevent, on the one hand, the nebulised liquid from coming out of the frame 3 and to facilitate, on the other, its collection in the basin 14.
With reference to
With reference to the embodiment shown in
According to one embodiment shown in
The support rods 22 can preferably be basically arched, so as to approximately follow the inner surface of the bottom wall of the liquid collection basin 14 and are provided with snap fastening elements, for example tube-holder devices 23, in which the delivery ducts 7 and the suction duct 15 are inserted. The support rods 22 can preferably keep the layer of the liquid collection basin 14 taut towards the outside. The support rods 22 preferably support the suction duct 15 below the delivery ducts 7 and approximately close to the bottom of the basin 14.
The operation method for the cultivation system 1 can be easily deduced from the above and will not be described further except to specify that it essentially comprises the steps of: collecting the dispersed nebulised liquid in the liquid collection basin 14 arranged immediately below the support shelves 4 of the cultivation plane Li, and sucking up the liquid contained in the liquid collection basin 14 through the suction duct 15 that extends inside the liquid collection basin 14 along the longitudinal axis B parallel to said direction K.
The cultivation system described above is advantageous in that it eliminates clogging conditions and therefore ensures that the cultivation environment is very clean, with all the advantages this entails in terms of reducing the risk of contamination caused by stagnation of the dispersed liquid.
The cultivation system also eliminates the need to place a common collection basin below the first cultivation plane, to collect the liquid that drains by gravity from the upper basins and therefore allows the minimum height of the first cultivation plane to be reduced, thus optimising the space that is occupied by the basins themselves in the prior art.
Lastly, it is clear that modifications and variants may be made to the cultivation system and method described and illustrated herein while remaining within the scope of the present invention defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102019000009603 | Jun 2019 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/055798 | 6/19/2020 | WO | 00 |