1. Introduction
Feeding seedlings by hand for automatic grafting and cutting machines has become an important factor limiting their productivity growth [
1,
2]. To automatically feed seedlings for grafting and cutting machines, it is necessary to solve the problem of separating the collected seedlings into individual seedlings [
3,
4,
5]. To address this issue, the ISO group has adopted the conveyor belt of shaking, conveying collected seedlings to separate the collected seedlings so as to provide individual seedlings for the machine vision-guided manipulator to pick up [
6]. Due to the uneven distribution of population seedlings on the conveyor belt, the indirect effect of dithering conveyor belt on population seedlings is random, resulting in an unstable separation speed [
7]. The Denbin group used a set of stepwise accelerated conveyor belts to separate the adjacent crabclaw seedlings; then, the manipulator was guided by machine vision to pick up individual crabclaw seedlings and deliver them to the automatic cutting machine. However, this method is only applicable to the condition that there is no collusion or linkage between separated materials, and the materials are not easy to roll [
8]. In the separation of walnut kernels and shells, the difference of the impact signal between the walnut kernel and shell under a fixed vibration frequency is identified by a computer, and the walnut kernel is separated from the walnut shell by high-pressure airflow. The mechanical separation method is only applicable to materials with a similar shape and strong impact resistance [
9].
Pneumatic separation has the advantages of simple structure, easy access to the separation medium, little damage to the separation objects, and low requirements for the shape and rigidity of separation objects. It is widely used in agricultural product harvesting, agricultural product classification and processing, food processing, chemical production, and other industries [
10]. The research on pneumatic separation in agricultural production focuses on the separation between grains and stems and fruit and cladding in the harvest mixture of the grain combine harvester [
11]. The basic principle of pneumatic separation is to use the difference of aerodynamic characteristic parameters suspension speed between objects to be separated to make the suspension speed of different materials have different suspension effects on a certain speed of air flow [
12,
13].
Therefore, pneumatic separation involves adjusting the speed of air flow to achieve the minimum suspension speed in the mixture, and then blowing out the materials with the minimum suspension speed to achieve the purpose of separation. However, the key point of the above pneumatic separation is that there must be differences between the characteristic parameters of the separated material and the suspension speed [
14,
15]. For the characteristic parameters of population seedlings, the difference of suspension speed is small, the seedlings are tender, and the shape of seedlings is irregular. Therefore, it is difficult to effectively separate similar materials by conventional pneumatic method.
On the basis of the above research, we established a subdivided air streams separation device to achieve the orderly separation of collected seedlings. Through high-speed photography, the separation process of population seedlings in the subdivided air streams field was observed [
16,
17], and the optimal parameters of separation operation were obtained. Under the optimal operation parameters, the test was carried out to obtain the productivity of the separation device during continuous operation [
18].
However, when the number of seedlings in the separation container is small, the fixed sequence jet separation method causes the separation rate of the system to decline sharply, which increases the seedling separation movement in the separation container and the number of collisions between seedlings, resulting in an increase in the damage rate. If a monitoring device is used to feed back the real-time position of the seedlings to be separated in the separation container, then the subdivided air stream would only spray at the jet holes where the seedlings are separated, which can greatly increase the separation efficiency and reduce the damage rate [
19,
20].
Based on the existing subdivision air stream separation device, the separation operation requirements of collected seedlings, and the photosensitive feedback monitoring device, the continuous and non-accumulation separation of population seedlings was realized by reducing the invalid operation times of subdivision air stream. Taking the separation rate of the improved subdivision air stream separation device as the evaluation index, a multi-factor orthogonal experiment was designed to determine the weighted optimal structural parameters and operation parameters of seedling size, light intensity, and photosensitive sensor diameter. Further, this study aimed to investigate the operational performance of the subdivision air stream separation system with a photosensitive sensing control device.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Seedling Properties
Because grafted tomato seedlings (
Figure 1) have good disease resistance and huge demand in agricultural production, tomato seedlings were taken as the research object [
21]. In order to reduce the cultivation space, tomato seedlings are usually densely planted in trays or soil. Before tomato seedling grafting, the seedlings are precut them in the cultivation area, then collected rootless seedlings and sent to the grafting area. At this time, the rootless tomato seedlings that are packaged together and hooked up with each other are collected seedlings. Since tomato seedlings are the research targets for our separation, their physical parameters play an important role in the design of our experimental devices [
22].
The geometric and physical parameters of 100 tomato seedlings with normal growth state, meeting the transplantation requirements, and suitable for automatic separation were measured [
23], as shown in
Table 1. Images of plant height, crown width, and projected area of tomato seedlings were collected by Sony FDR-AX700 (Sony Inc., Tokyo, Japan). Use ImageJ 1.8.0.112 software (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA, Software sources:
https://imagej.net/software/fiji/downloads, accessed on 14 November 2022) to process the image and obtain the geometric parameters of tomato seedlings. Moreover, terminal velocity is also an important parameter to analyze the force and motion of tomato seedlings in the air stream [
24,
25]. We placed the tomato seedlings into the measuring instrument, recorded the speed of 100 tomato plants when they moved up with the air flow with an anemometer, and finally took the average value of the suspension speed. The anemometer (Xima, Hong Kong, China) was used to record the speed of 100 tomatoes in the vertical air tunnel when they just moved with the rising air flow, and finally, the average suspension speed was recorded.
From
Table 1, the geometric parameters of the tomato seedlings during the grafting period varied significantly, owing to the influence of the phototaxis and photosynthesis competition of plants. However, the growth rate of the tomato seedling height was greater than that of the crown width. Nevertheless, the projected area of the side view of large seedlings was larger than that of small seedlings, so it had a significant effect on the separation process of the subdivided air stream.
2.2. Separation System
As shown in
Figure 2, the separation system of the collected seedlings consisted of a feeding device for providing the collected seedlings, a separating device that generated subdivided air streams by controlling the solenoid valve, a vacuum picking belt for picking and transporting the separated individual seedlings, a delivery device, a feedback monitoring device for monitoring the separation status in the separation container, a pneumatic unit, and a control unit.
When receiving the supply signal from the control unit, the feed belt will collect a fixed number of group seedlings into the seedling collection box, and a fixed quantity of seedlings will be transported to the supply box by the seedling supply belt. Then, the lifting door will open, and at the same time, the pushing nozzle will blow a positive air flow to send the collected seedlings into the separator. After the feeding process is complete, the lifting door will close.
The separating device uses the subdivided air streams to separate the collected seedlings into individuals and deliver them to the vacuum picking belt.
The function of the picking belt is to use negative pressure to pick up the seedlings, and then the seedlings will fall off when the picking belt moves to the delivery unit.
The individual seedling delivery unit is mainly comprised of two delivery belts. The speed of the first delivery belt is lower than that of the second delivery belt, so that when the seedlings enter the second delivery belt, the distance between the adjacent seedlings can be significantly increased.
2.3. Feedback Monitoring Device
During seedling separation, the seedlings rapidly move in the separation container and are very tender. Therefore, a feedback monitoring device with a rapid response and no mechanical contact with the seedlings is required. In recent years, machine-vision recognition technology has been widely used in the field of agricultural equipment [
26]. It can not only recognize the biometrics of the object but also the position of the target [
27]. Although the visual recognition system has powerful functions, it has a complex structure, cumbersome data processing, low operational efficiency, and high cost. By comparing the performance parameters of different types of sensors, photoelectric and photosensitive sensors exhibit characteristics of rapid response and low cost, but the monitoring area of the photoelectric sensor is small, which cannot satisfy the monitoring requirements of a row of jet pipes in the separation room during subdivided air stream operation.
Therefore, we selected a photosensitive sensor as the feedback monitoring device. The photosensitive sensor is extremely sensitive to changes in the light intensity. It can sense the position of tomato seedlings in the monitoring area of the separation container through the change in light intensity received by the sensor, which is caused by the shading effect of the seedlings in the separation container.
The feedback monitoring device consists of an induction detection module and monitoring terminal, as shown in
Figure 3. The photosensitive sensing device is located at the bottom of the phase-backlight surface of the separation container and is installed on the top of each jet orifice. The working process of the feedback monitoring device is shown in
Figure 4.
The working process of the feedback monitoring device is as follows: When the seedlings passed through the photosensitive sensor, the light entering the photosensitive resistor changed. The group seedling induction detection module converted the light intensity change induced by the photosensitive resistance into a voltage signal through the signal acquisition circuit and transmitted it to the monitoring terminal through Controller Area Network (CAN bus) technology. The analogue-to-digital (ADC) module inside the monitoring terminal is an important center that connects the host computer and information processing and can logically process the collected voltage data. Finally, by adjusting the proportional relationship between the cathode current limiting resistance and the transmission current limiting resistance of the optocoupler, and then comparing the rising and falling edges of the signal square wave, the signal was smoothly adjusted, and the square wave signal was output and transmitted to the programmable logic controller Mitsubishi FR-FX3U (Mitsubishi Inc., Tokyo, Japan). At the same time, accurate monitoring of the position of tomato seedlings in the separation container and information transmission with the PLC were realized. The control flow is illustrated in
Figure 5.
The workflow of the seedling separation system was as follows. First, the control device drove the feeding device to feed collected seedling to the separator. When the feeding operation was completed, the PLC controlled the solenoid valve connected with the jet nozzle to generate subdivision air streams to achieve the separation of the collected seedlings. Each group of jets lasted for 0.5 s. However, when the number of seedlings in the separation container was small, the fixed sequence jet separation method caused the separation rate of the system to decline sharply. Therefore, we developed a feedback monitoring device which could continuously monitor the separation status of seedlings collected in the separation container and send the status signal to PLC. The PLC that originally controlled the solenoid valve to generate subdivided air stream according to the predetermined sequence should control the on-off status of the corresponding nozzle according to the judgment signal sent by the feedback monitoring device before each air injection. During this period, the picking belt carried the individual seedlings separated and pushed by the subdivided air streams to the delivery unit through the perforated vacuum belt. Finally, the delivery device supplied individual tomato seedlings to the automatic grafting equipment to complete the whole separation operation. When the monitoring system determined that there were no seedlings to be separated, it started to send a signal to the control unit, and the control unit sent a command to the feeding device to supply collected seedlings to the separator. Subsequently, another separation was initiated.
2.4. Separation Experiment
To understand the operation effect of the feedback monitoring device on the subdivision air stream separation system, a seedling blowing experiment was conducted based on the original subdivision air stream operation platform. To eliminate the motion interference between seedlings during the separation process, single seedlings with the same windward area were randomly placed at the bottom of the separation container to investigate the effect of the subdivided air stream on seedlings controlled by the feedback system. The effective seedling blowing rate, which is the ratio of the number of times a single seedling can reach the vacuum pickup strap to the 100 times the subdivided air stream acts, was explored to determine the reasonable operation parameters of the feedback monitoring device.
According to the previous experiment of separating tomato seedlings by subdividing air streams, the operation time and pressure of each jet group were set to 0.5 s and 0.5 MP, respectively [
4]. To enable the sensor to capture the tomato seedlings in the separation container, the installation height of the sensor should not be lower than the average height when a single seedling is naturally laid on the bottom of the separation container. The previous experiment revealed that the average height of a single seedling when laid flat at the bottom of the separation container was 10 mm, so the distance between the sensor and the bottom of the separation container was set to 10 mm, and the photosensitive sensor was installed perpendicular to the wall of the separation container.
The photosensitive sensor is an important detection element of the monitoring system. By changing the position of the seedlings in the separation container, the intensity of the light entering the photosensitive sensor changed. Consequently, the provided signal changed to PLC to control the monitoring device on the subdivision air stream generated by the solenoid valve group. Thus, the induction speed and accuracy of photosensitive resistance directly impacted the induction performance of the feedback monitoring device. Therefore, the illumination intensity of the background light in the separation container and the size of the sensor significantly impacted the separation rate of feedback monitoring. At the same time, the size of the seedling is also an important factor to be considered. According to the preliminary experiment, when the light intensity exceeded 60 lux, the scattering phenomenon in the separation container was strong, which reduced the sensitivity of the photosensitive sensor to the change in seedling position in the separation container. When the light intensity was <20 lux, the photosensitive sensor was susceptible to light changes in the external environment, resulting in an induction error in the seedlings. Therefore, the background light intensity in the separation container was set to 20, 40, and 60 lux. As shown in
Figure 2, the distance between two adjacent jet holes is 20 mm. The maximum diameter of the photosensitive sensor was set to 15 mm to ensure the monitoring area of the feedback monitoring device covered the bottom of the entire separation container and that each jet hole had an independent photosensitive sensor without interference between adjacent sensors.
However, when the seedlings were simultaneously monitored by adjacent sensors, the subdivision air stream at an unreasonable position acted on the end of the seedlings and could not send the seedlings to the picking belt. Therefore, the minimum diameter left between the sensors was set to 5 mm, and the response times of the Gl05528, Gl10528, and Gl15528 series photosensitive sensors were approximately the same [
28]; hence, the sensors were directly set to 5 mm, 10 mm, and 15 mm.
Because closely planted seedlings blocked each other and affected the photosynthesis of seedlings, there were individual differences in the same batch of tomato seedlings.
Table 1 shows that the projected area (A) of the tomato seedlings in the transplant stage in this study ranged from approximately 3229 mm
2 to 3631 mm
2. There must have been differences in the separation performance for such a large variation in A. Tomato seedlings were divided into large, medium, and small seedlings according to the size of the projected area of the side view, and its three-level values were set as 3250–3367 mm
2, 3367–3484 mm
2, and 3484–3600 mm
2, which were defined as small seedlings, medium seedlings, and large seedlings, respectively.
In summary, the size of the tomato seedlings, background illuminance of the separation container, and diameter of the sensor were selected as experimental factors in this experiment. After repeating the experiment five times for each factor, the average value was taken, and the L9 (33) orthogonal table was selected for the test. A multivariate quadratic regression equation was used to fit the functional relationship between the factor and the response level, and the optimal process parameters were determined by analyzing the regression equation.
The separation operation experiment was designed to explore the separation effect of the separation system on the collected seedlings after using the feedback monitoring system. The separation system which was shown in
Figure 6, and operating parameters of the feedback monitoring separation experiment were consistent with those of the seedling blowing experiment. The 90 mm-thick seedlings were sent to the separation container through the seedling feeding device and the experiment was started. During the test, the number of seedlings delivered by the vacuum pickup belt was counted and the separation rate (SR) was determined, which is the number of seedlings separated from the separation system per unit time. At the same time, the coefficient of variation (CV) of SR was introduced to study the stability of the separation system in cyclic operation. The experiment was repeated 10 times, and the average value was calculated. Separation without feedback monitoring was added as the control group. The investigation indicators that were measured included the number of subdivided air stream operations (Q), i.e., the total number of subdivided air stream operations to complete the entire separation operation, and the damage rate (DR), i.e., the proportion of damaged seedlings (Ws) to that of the total isolated seedlings (Wt) in the separation operations.
3. Results and Discussion
The simulation test was performed according to the orthogonal rotation test design, with the values of various influencing factors as independent variables and the effective seedling blowing rate as the evaluation index. The test results are listed in
Table 2.
According to the data sample in
Table 2, the Design-Expert 10.0.3 software (Stat-Ease Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA, Software sources:
https://www.statease.com/, accessed on 14 November 2022) was used for quadratic regression analysis and multiple regression fitting. The
p values of the model (<0.0001) and lack of fit (0.2183 > 0.05) indicate that the quadratic regression model has high significance.
Table 3 shows the analysis of variance (ANOVA) results of each response variable after the stepwise regression. Seedling size (A) and light intensity (B) significantly affected the effective blowing rate; therefore, A and B had a significant influence on the effective blowing rate. The effect of the diameter of the sensor (C) on the effective blowing rate was not significant.
The response surface diagram was drawn according to the regression equation and a three-dimensional spatial surface, which consisted of the results of the response values obtained under the interaction of various experimental factors. It can predict and test the response values of the variables and determine the relationship between them. The relationship between the effective blowing rate and various factors is shown in the
Figure 7.
As shown in
Figure 7a, the relationship between light intensity and seedling size on the effective seedling blowing rate was spherical. As the light intensity and seedling size increased, the effective separation rate first increased, then decreased. The analysis revealed that, with the increase in light intensity, the shading effect of seedlings on light became increasingly obvious, and the change precision of light intensity collected by the photosensitive probe of the monitoring module increased, thus improving the effective seedling blowing rate of the system. However, when the light intensity was high, the scattering of light in the separation container increased, which increased the light entering the photosensitive sensor. However, the gap between the large seedling leaves and stalks was larger than that between the small seedlings, which made it easier for light to pass through the seedlings. In other words, the light penetration ability of large seedlings was stronger than that of small seedlings.
The graphic features of
Figure 7b,c mainly exhibit a cylindrical shape, indicating that the sensor diameter had little effect on the effective seedling blowing rate. However, the light intensity had a great influence on the effective seedling blowing rate. When the light intensity was low, the shadow cast on the sensor after being shielded by tomato seedlings had a great impact on the photosensitive sensor. The photosensitive sensor was completely covered more easily, which may result in solenoid valve operation when the seedling does not enter the sensor-monitoring area. When the light intensity was strong, the photosensitive sensor with a large diameter required a greater light intensity change to cause its effect, and the shielding ability of the seedlings was limited. The seedling covered the sensor but did not reach the sensing threshold.
By observing the separation process of the tomato seedlings, a statistical analysis of the reasons for reducing the effective seedling blowing rate was performed (
Figure 8). The horizontal axis represents the sensor diameter, and each vertical axis represents the number of seedlings. The “I” phenomenon mainly occurred in
Figure 8c,f,i because, when the light intensity was high, the scattered light affected the sensor’s induction in the seedlings.
Figure 8i reveals that the number of “I” phenomena occurring at various sensor diameters (i.e., 10) was larger than those occurring in
Figure 8c,f. This is because the effect of large seedlings on light shielding was not as good as that of small seedlings, so light readily penetrated the gap between the leaves and stems of large seedlings. As shown in
Figure 8a,d,g, when the light intensity was low, the light could not penetrate the tomato seedlings, resulting in a shadow at the sensor position that spread to the adjacent sensor, causing wrong operation; hence, the “II” phenomenon occurred. The occurrence of “II” in
Figure 8a was more than that in
Figure 8d,g because the light transmittance of small seedlings was poor, so the shadow was deeper than that of the large seedlings. When the diameter of the sensor is large, although the monitoring blind area of the monitoring area is reduced, it will also cause the action of jet holes when both ends of the seedling enter the monitoring area. Because the separation effect of the subdivided air stream on the seedling does not act on the main body of the seedling, the seedling cannot move along the action of the subdivided air stream, which reduces the effective seedling blowing rate and causes the “III” phenomenon, which mainly occurred in
Figure 8g,h,i. The “IV” phenomenon mainly occurs because, although seedlings returning to the bottom of the separation chamber after being impacted by the subdivided air stream did not trigger the sensor action, the unstable air stream in the separation chamber caused the tomato seedlings with low masses to shake left and right, resulting in the unstable on-off signal of the sensor. Thus, the tomato could not be directly affected by the subdivided air stream. The “IV” phenomenon occurred in both small and medium seedlings, but not in large seedlings.
When the light intensity was 41.496 lux, the seedling size was 3445.442 mm2, the sensor diameter was 9.358 mm, and the predicted maximum effective blowing rate was 97.559%. The optimized parameters were used in the experiment to verify the accuracy of the model prediction. The experiment was repeated 10 times. The actual measured value of the optimal parameters was 96.8%, and the error with the model-predicted value was 0.8%, indicating that the predicted value and the measured value have good consistency, which further verifies the reliability of the model. Therefore, the experimental parameters of the detection device optimized by Behnken’s combined experimental design were accurate, reliable, and practical.
Figure 9 depicts a variation curve of seedling quantity with time for the two separation methods for the separation system with and without feedback monitoring.
Figure 10 shows the trend of SR over time during the tomato seedling separation operation using the two separation methods.
Initially, the change curve of SR and seedling quantity with the two separation methods indicated no significant difference because sufficient seedlings in the separation container could completely cover the probe of the monitoring device. In addition, the two separation methods generated the same subdivision air stream.
Then, when the seedling volume in the separation container decreased from 70% to 30%, the seedlings to be separated gathered into clusters or distributed at intervals, owing to the action of the subdivided air stream. When no seedlings were monitored by the sensors above the jet hole, the SR without feedback monitoring separation was 20% lower than before due to ineffective operation. However, the separation method with feedback monitoring does not perform jet operation when there is no seedling above the jet hole, which not only guarantees the operation of the subdivided air stream but also maintains the continuity of the separation process, so the SR was not reduced.
During the process of reducing seedling volume in the separating container from 30% to 0% by the separating system, the SR of the separating method with and without feedback monitoring was reduced by 54% and 13%, respectively, and the error bandwidth of seedling quantity at this stage was wider than before, indicating that the stability of seedling quantity change in the separation chamber was poor at this time. Moreover, the error band of seedling quantity without the feedback separation method was wider than that with the feedback separation method, indicating that the separation process of the former was more unstable at this time (
Figure 9). The trend line of the SR revealed that the separation method with feedback was smoother and more efficient than the separation method without feedback (
Figure 10). On the one hand, the number of invalid operations without feedback monitoring sensing increased with the decrease in seedlings in the separation container, particularly when three seedlings remained in the separation container, and the SR decreased to the lowest value of 0.4. Although the feedback monitoring separation method has fewer invalid operations, feedback monitoring separation requires waiting for the seedlings to fall to the bottom of the separation container to trigger the photosensitive sensor, thus increasing the waiting time for the seedlings to fall during the overall operation. On the other hand, the gas pressure of the separating system used in this study did not decrease with the decrease in seedling volume, which caused the seedlings to reach the picking belt very quickly, and the seedlings was not easily pick up by the picking belt. This is a problem that requires attention in future equipment design.
In summary, the average SR with and without feedback monitoring of the controlled subdivision air stream separation system was 2.44 plants/s and 1.42 plants/s, the separation productivity was 8784 plants/h and 5113 plants/h, and the CV was 0.12% and 0.33%, respectively.
Figure 11 shows the number of subdivided air stream operations (
Figure 11a) and damage rate (
Figure 11b) in a separation operation of two separation methods for separation systems with and without feedback monitoring. The separation mode without feedback monitoring could only be operated according to the fixed program, which made the seedlings undergo more invalid operations in the separation container. Thus, the damage rates of the subdivided air stream separation system with and without feedback monitoring were 2% and 6%, respectively, and the number of subdivided air stream operations was 138 and 73, respectively. The wilting degree of seedlings separated without feedback monitoring was more obvious than that separated with feedback monitoring.
In our previous research, the productivity of separating collected seedlings by subdividing air streams method was 17,100 plant/h [
4]. However, the separation productivity of the separation system with the feedback monitoring device in this study was only 8784 plants/h. On the one hand, the picking capacity of the picking belt cannot meet the production efficiency of the subdivided air streams; on the other hand, the sensor of the feedback monitoring device was installed at the bottom of the separation chamber, which cannot monitor the status of the seedlings in the separation chamber in real time. Although the separation system used in this study can further improve the productivity, it has been able to satisfy the current productivity needs of the grafting and cutting machine [
6,
7].