Energy Gain in Passive Solar Greenhouses Due to CO2 Enrichment
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Greenhouse and Passive Solar System Description—Instrumentation
- Twelve temperature sensors (PT-100 type), 4 for the air, 4 for the soil and 4 for the water, inside the greenhouses.
- An inside CO2 sensor (double beam infrared CO2 analyzer).
- An inside pyranometer (class A).
- Two inside humidity–temperature sensors (HOBO H8).
- An outside weather station equipped with a wind gauge, a wind indicator, a thermometer, a pyranometer and a humidity meter.
2.2. The System and Application of CO2 Enrichment—Ventilation of Greenhouses
2.3. Experimental Methods
2.4. Modeling the Energy Saving
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. First Experimental Stage, During the Spring—No Passive Solar System
3.2. Second Experimental Stage, During the Autumn
3.3. Third Experimental Stage, During the Springtime with a Passive Solar System
3.4. Effect of Relative Humidity and Plant Growth
4. Conclusions
- The temperatures of air, soil and sleeve water of the experimental greenhouse were always higher than those of the control greenhouse in all the experimental stages. The air temperature differences between the experimental and the control greenhouses ranged from 0 °C to 1.55 °C in the first experimental stage during the spring without the assistance of a passive solar system. The air temperature differences in the other two stages, which incorporated the passive solar system, ranged from 0.3 °C to 2.9 °C in the second stage during the autumn and from 0.75 °C to 2.1 °C in the third stage.
- The temperature variations of soil and water in the solar sleeves were always smoother than in the air temperature in both greenhouse plots; this was due to the higher thermal capacity of soil and water compared to the corresponding air.
- By calculating the quantity of energy captured at sunset in the two greenhouse plots, it was concluded that the experimental greenhouse captured 10% to 25% more energy than the control greenhouse during springtime without the assistance of a supplementary passive solar system. In all the rest of the experimental trials, the solar energy obtained ranged from 35% to 70% due to the simultaneous use of a passive solar system. The range of energy gain depended on the duration of CO2 enrichment during the previous day.
- From the heat loss analysis of the two greenhouses for all the nights during the experiments, it was concluded that the amount of energy gain in the experimental greenhouse was always higher than that of the control greenhouse. In particular, the average value of the total energy difference between the two greenhouse plots was 0.114 kWh·m−2 per night, without a passive solar system and 0.236 kWh·m−2 per night with the use of a passive solar system, during the springtime. The average total energy difference between the two plots was 0.249 kWh·m−2 per night, during autumn, with the incorporation of a passive solar system, which was close to those of the springtime results under similar conditions.
- The comparison of the results between the first stage experiments and those of the third clarified that the use of a passive solar system expanded the possibility of energy saving with the application of CO2 enrichment; this is very important, since this specific passive solar system is used worldwide more than any other system collecting solar energy in greenhouses. The conclusion for the energy saving derives from the comparison between the two greenhouse plots for each experimental period. In all three experiments, spring–autumn–spring, there was energy saving due to CO2 enrichment. This saving was higher with the use of the passive solar system; this is singularly obvious by comparing the mean values of energy saving per night between the first and third experiment which was 16 kWh/night on the first experiment without the passive solar system while on the third experiment with the passive solar system the energy saving came up to 33.1 kWh/night.
- Finally, it was found that greenhouses with no CO2 applications are more sensitive to sudden ambient temperature changes than those greenhouses, where CO2 applied the previous day, reacting to more normal temperature degradation during the following night.
- Equations (1) and (2) can be used in the future in order to create energy diagrams for greenhouses and to determine energy savings in greenhouses where CO2 enrichment is applied compared to other non-CO2 enriched greenhouses.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Martzopoulou, A.; Vafiadis, D.; Fragos, V.P. Energy Gain in Passive Solar Greenhouses Due to CO2 Enrichment. Energies 2020, 13, 1242. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13051242
Martzopoulou A, Vafiadis D, Fragos VP. Energy Gain in Passive Solar Greenhouses Due to CO2 Enrichment. Energies. 2020; 13(5):1242. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13051242
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartzopoulou, Anastasia, Dimitris Vafiadis, and Vassilios P. Fragos. 2020. "Energy Gain in Passive Solar Greenhouses Due to CO2 Enrichment" Energies 13, no. 5: 1242. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13051242
APA StyleMartzopoulou, A., Vafiadis, D., & Fragos, V. P. (2020). Energy Gain in Passive Solar Greenhouses Due to CO2 Enrichment. Energies, 13(5), 1242. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13051242