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Greenhouse gardening --- Vegetable gardening --- Greenhouses. --- Hothouses --- Floriculture --- Gardening --- Horticulture --- Conservatories --- Garden rooms --- Phytotron --- Kitchen gardens --- Truck farming --- Victory gardens --- Gardening under glass --- Greenhouse culture --- Indoor gardening --- Artificial light gardening --- Greenhouses, Window
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A discussion of challenges related to the modeling and control of greenhouse crop growth, this book presents state-of-the-art answers to those challenges. The authors model the subsystems involved in successful greenhouse control using different techniques and show how the models obtained can be exploited for simulation or control design; they suggest ideas for the development of physical and/or black-box models for this purpose. Strategies for the control of climate- and irrigation-related variables are brought forward. The uses of PID control and feedforward compensators, both widely used in commercial tools, are summarized. The benefits of advanced control techniques—event-based, robust, and predictive control, for example—are used to improve on the performance of those basic methods. A hierarchical control architecture is developed governed by a high-level multiobjective optimization approach rather than traditional constrained optimization and artificial intelligence techniques. Reference trajectories are found for diurnal and nocturnal temperatures (climate-related setpoints) and electrical conductivity (fertirrigation-related setpoints). The objectives are to maximize profit, fruit quality, and water-use efficiency, these being encouraged by current international rules. Illustrative practical results selected from those obtained in an industrial greenhouse during the last eight years are shown and described. The text of the book is complemented by the use of illustrations, tables and real examples which are helpful in understanding the material. Modeling and Control of Greenhouse Crop Growth will be of interest to industrial engineers, academic researchers and graduates from agricultural, chemical, and process-control backgrounds. Advances in Industrial Control aims to report and encourage the transfer of technology in control engineering. The rapid development of control technology has an impact on all areas of the control discipline. The series offers an opportunity for researchers to present an extended exposition of new work in all aspects of industrial control.
Engineering. --- Control. --- Agriculture. --- Industrial and Production Engineering. --- Industrial engineering. --- Ingénierie --- Agriculture --- Génie industriel --- Greenhouse management. --- Greenhouses -- Automatic control. --- TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Agriculture / General. --- Mechanical Engineering --- Engineering & Applied Sciences --- Mechanical Engineering - General --- Greenhouses --- Automatic control. --- Greenhouse culture --- Hothouses --- Management --- Control engineering. --- Production engineering. --- Manufacturing engineering --- Process engineering --- Industrial engineering --- Mechanical engineering --- Management engineering --- Simplification in industry --- Engineering --- Value analysis (Cost control) --- Control engineering --- Control equipment --- Control theory --- Engineering instruments --- Automation --- Programmable controllers --- Farming --- Husbandry --- Industrial arts --- Life sciences --- Food supply --- Land use, Rural --- Construction --- Technology --- Horticulture --- Floriculture --- Gardening --- Conservatories --- Garden rooms --- Phytotron --- Control and Systems Theory.
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As the annual production of carbon Dioxide (CO2) reaches 30 billion tones, the growing issue of the greenhouse effect has triggered the development of technologies for CO2 sequestration, storage and use as a reactant. Collecting together the reports of the Congress at University of Rome (Campus Bio-medico) held 16th April 2012, CO2: A Valuable Source of Carbon presents and discusses promising technologies for the industrial exploitation of CO2. Divided into two parts, the current technology is evaluated and summarized before European and national projects are presented. The focus on CO2 recovery, particularly in value-added production, proposes applicable methods to develop sustainable practices and even to mitigate greenhouse gas emission from large-scale fossil fuels usage. Including current data and real-world examples, CO2: A valuable source of carbon provides students, engineers, researchers and industry professional with up-to-date material and potential areas for development and research.
Business & Economics --- Industries --- Carbon dioxide. --- Greenhouses. --- Hothouses --- Carbonic acid gas --- Carbonic anhydride --- Energy. --- Renewable energy resources. --- Energy policy. --- Energy and state. --- Engineering economics. --- Engineering economy. --- Renewable energy sources. --- Alternate energy sources. --- Green energy industries. --- Energy Policy, Economics and Management. --- Renewable and Green Energy. --- Engineering Economics, Organization, Logistics, Marketing. --- Green energy industries --- Energy industries --- Alternate energy sources --- Alternative energy sources --- Energy sources, Renewable --- Sustainable energy sources --- Power resources --- Renewable natural resources --- Agriculture and energy --- Economy, Engineering --- Engineering economics --- Industrial engineering --- Energy and state --- State and energy --- Industrial policy --- Energy conservation --- Government policy --- Floriculture --- Gardening --- Horticulture --- Conservatories --- Garden rooms --- Phytotron --- Carbon compounds --- Oxides --- Carbon sequestration.
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