With the appropriate components in a system design, we can:
- Reduce luminaire maintenance with LEDs
- Reduce energy costs with LEDs
- Place luminaires closer to plants with less damage/risk
- Control spectral content and adjust it to match plant needs more closely
Tero outlines two camps when it comes to designing luminaires for horticultural operations:
- The first camp believes that you don’t need optics in your design because they can reduce the overall efficacy of the luminaire due to losses. (Not inaccurate but not necessarily a concern when you consider the tradeoffs in this particular operation.)
- The second camp says that you can maximize the usage of the light by incorporating the appropriate optics for the intended application. (In other words, think like a plant. How much light do you need to absorb? What characteristics are you intending to encourage in the growing crop?)
Obviously, our speaker is in the second camp. 😊
Continue seeding your knowledge of SSL for this growing market by attending the 2018 Horticultural Lighting Conferences. The first event will be held May 14–15 in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and the second takes place October 9–10 in Portland, OR.
As he notes, optics define where the light is going. If the optics are aiming light in the wrong place or you’re not using them at all, then light is being wasted, causing light pollution and unnecessary energy consumption.
Tero also poses some design questions to ask during the product development or specification process:
- Are photons going where they are consumed?
- What is the required distance between luminaires?
- What is the required distance between luminaires and plants?
Optical components can be the key to resolving these questions and challenges in the horticultural lighting project.
An interesting point is that beam angles can influence the PPFD (photosynthetic photon flux density) and determine how far the luminaires should be spaced from each other and from the plants themselves (or even how close they can get, for example, by using vertical lighting and interlighting to reach the parts of plants that do not receive light from directly above the canopy). Optics can produce wide or narrow beam distributions for a different amount of light penetration into the foliage; or asymmetric distributions can be used to illuminate vertically or off-axis to allow horticultural luminaires to be installed in the ceiling/roof infrastructure while still distributing light to the lower parts of plants.
According to Tero’s design premises, when light is focused as needed on the plants, you will either get greater crop yield and shorter growing cycles or you will reduce the bill of materials costs of the luminaire. Either way, the result is a better return on investment in LED-based horticultural lighting.
More horticultural lighting science, application, and design information
Understand energy efficiency of LED horticultural lighting systems
Science advances in matching LED lighting to horticultural needs
Horticultural Lighting Conference chronicles LED impact on food supply
LED efficacy, UV, and plant feedback highlight horticulture presentations
Carrie Meadows | Editor-in-Chief, LEDs Magazine
Carrie Meadows has more than 20 years of experience in the publishing and media industry. She worked with the PennWell Technology Group for more than 17 years, having been part of the editorial staff at Solid State Technology, Microlithography World, Lightwave, Portable Design, CleanRooms, Laser Focus World, and Vision Systems Design before the group was acquired by current parent company Endeavor Business Media.
Meadows has received finalist recognition for LEDs Magazine in the FOLIO Eddie Awards, and has volunteered as a judge on several B2B editorial awards committees. She received a BA in English literature from Saint Anselm College, and earned thesis honors in the college's Geisel Library. Without the patience to sit down and write a book of her own, she has gladly undertaken the role of editor for the writings of friends and family.
Meadows enjoys living in the beautiful but sometimes unpredictable four seasons of the New England region, volunteering with an animal shelter, reading (of course), and walking with friends and extended "dog family" in her spare time.