[go: up one dir, main page]

US20210235643A1 - Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system - Google Patents

Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20210235643A1
US20210235643A1 US17/301,671 US202117301671A US2021235643A1 US 20210235643 A1 US20210235643 A1 US 20210235643A1 US 202117301671 A US202117301671 A US 202117301671A US 2021235643 A1 US2021235643 A1 US 2021235643A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sensor
growth
growing
vertical
crop
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US17/301,671
Inventor
Jaremy CREECHLEY
Nathaniel R. Storey
Damon Henry Smith
Brian Paul Scoggins
Cena Miller
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
MJNN LLC
Original Assignee
MJNN LLC
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by MJNN LLC filed Critical MJNN LLC
Priority to US17/301,671 priority Critical patent/US20210235643A1/en
Publication of US20210235643A1 publication Critical patent/US20210235643A1/en
Assigned to SEE JANE FARM, INC. reassignment SEE JANE FARM, INC. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CREECHLEY, Jaremy, STOREY, NATHANIEL R.
Assigned to MJNN LLC reassignment MJNN LLC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: SEE JANE FARM, INC.
Assigned to MJNN LLC reassignment MJNN LLC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: Bright Agrotech, Inc.
Assigned to Bright Agrotech, Inc. reassignment Bright Agrotech, Inc. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: Bright Agrotech, Inc.
Assigned to Bright Agrotech, Inc. reassignment Bright Agrotech, Inc. NUNC PRO TUNC ASSIGNMENT (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: BROWN, CENA ELISE, Scoggins, Brian Paul, SMITH, DAMON HENRY
Assigned to ONE MADISON GROUP – PLENTY II, LLC, AS COLLATERAL AGENT reassignment ONE MADISON GROUP – PLENTY II, LLC, AS COLLATERAL AGENT SECURITY INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: MJNN LLC
Assigned to MJNN LLC reassignment MJNN LLC TERMINATION AND RELEASE OF SECURITY INTEREST IN PATENTS AT REEL 070364/FRAME 0725 Assignors: ONE MADISON GROUP – PLENTY II, LLC, AS COLLATERAL AGENT
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G31/00Soilless cultivation, e.g. hydroponics
    • A01G31/02Special apparatus therefor
    • A01G31/06Hydroponic culture on racks or in stacked containers
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G2/00Vegetative propagation
    • A01G2/20Layering
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G27/00Self-acting watering devices, e.g. for flower-pots
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G31/00Soilless cultivation, e.g. hydroponics
    • A01G31/02Special apparatus therefor
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G31/00Soilless cultivation, e.g. hydroponics
    • A01G31/02Special apparatus therefor
    • A01G31/04Hydroponic culture on conveyors
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G31/00Soilless cultivation, e.g. hydroponics
    • A01G31/02Special apparatus therefor
    • A01G31/04Hydroponic culture on conveyors
    • A01G31/045Hydroponic culture on conveyors with containers guided along a rail
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G7/00Botany in general
    • A01G7/02Treatment of plants with carbon dioxide
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G7/00Botany in general
    • A01G7/04Electric or magnetic or acoustic treatment of plants for promoting growth
    • A01G7/045Electric or magnetic or acoustic treatment of plants for promoting growth with electric lighting
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G9/00Cultivation in receptacles, forcing-frames or greenhouses; Edging for beds, lawn or the like
    • A01G9/02Receptacles, e.g. flower-pots or boxes; Glasses for cultivating flowers
    • A01G9/022Pots for vertical horticulture
    • A01G9/023Multi-tiered planters
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G9/00Cultivation in receptacles, forcing-frames or greenhouses; Edging for beds, lawn or the like
    • A01G9/02Receptacles, e.g. flower-pots or boxes; Glasses for cultivating flowers
    • A01G9/029Receptacles for seedlings
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G9/00Cultivation in receptacles, forcing-frames or greenhouses; Edging for beds, lawn or the like
    • A01G9/24Devices or systems for heating, ventilating, regulating temperature, illuminating, or watering, in greenhouses, forcing-frames, or the like
    • A01G9/246Air-conditioning systems
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G9/00Cultivation in receptacles, forcing-frames or greenhouses; Edging for beds, lawn or the like
    • A01G9/24Devices or systems for heating, ventilating, regulating temperature, illuminating, or watering, in greenhouses, forcing-frames, or the like
    • A01G9/247Watering arrangements
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G9/00Cultivation in receptacles, forcing-frames or greenhouses; Edging for beds, lawn or the like
    • A01G9/24Devices or systems for heating, ventilating, regulating temperature, illuminating, or watering, in greenhouses, forcing-frames, or the like
    • A01G9/249Lighting means
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G9/00Cultivation in receptacles, forcing-frames or greenhouses; Edging for beds, lawn or the like
    • A01G9/24Devices or systems for heating, ventilating, regulating temperature, illuminating, or watering, in greenhouses, forcing-frames, or the like
    • A01G9/26Electric devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N7/00Television systems
    • H04N7/18Closed-circuit television [CCTV] systems, i.e. systems in which the video signal is not broadcast
    • H04N7/183Closed-circuit television [CCTV] systems, i.e. systems in which the video signal is not broadcast for receiving images from a single remote source
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B47/00Circuit arrangements for operating light sources in general, i.e. where the type of light source is not relevant
    • H05B47/10Controlling the light source
    • H05B47/105Controlling the light source in response to determined parameters
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B45/00Circuit arrangements for operating light-emitting diodes [LED]
    • H05B45/10Controlling the intensity of the light
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P60/00Technologies relating to agriculture, livestock or agroalimentary industries
    • Y02P60/20Reduction of greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions in agriculture, e.g. CO2
    • Y02P60/21Dinitrogen oxide [N2O], e.g. using aquaponics, hydroponics or efficiency measures

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to a vertical hydroponic and aeroponic plant production apparatus and system and, more particularly, the invention relates to a control system configured for use in a vertical hydroponic and aeroponic plant production system comprising a controlled environment allowing for vertical hydroponic and aeroponic crop production in a fraction of the space necessary for traditional plant production techniques.
  • the inventors combine advances in agriculture with the increasing technological advances of industry acquired since the industrial revolution.
  • the inventors also incorporate the more recent concept of assembly line automation, and herein have conceived a vertical farming structure within a controlled environment and having columns comprising automated growth modules.
  • the vertical structure is capable of being moved about an automated conveyance system in an open or closed-loop fashion, exposed to precision-controlled lighting, airflow and humidity, with ideal nutritional support.
  • new control systems capable of machine learning, or artificial intelligence, through the assimilation of thousands or even millions of data points acquired by strategically placed sensors during the course of a growing cycle or multiple growing cycles, and further capable of automatically adjusting year-round crop growth conditions within the controlled environment such as lighting, fertilizers (nutrients), moisture, gas levels, temperature, air flow, and ultimately, packaging to produce higher yields at a lower cost per square foot due to plants' vertical growth and increased space efficiency, with reduced overall losses per planted crop, better nutritional value, visual appeal and faster growth cycles.
  • a multi-stage, plant growing system has been configured for high density growth and crop yields and includes among other things, towers and/or vertical columns comprising a plurality of interchangeable growth modules, an enclosed controlled environmental growth chamber, sensors or sensor arrays and control systems capable of machine learning wherein the crops are optimally spaced and continually staged in their planting cycles utilizing the interchangeable growth modules to provide an accelerated and continuous annual production yield.
  • the growth modules are capable of being moveably and detachably affixed to vertical columns, or stand-alone towers, within the enclosed controlled environmental growth chamber and support automated staging for planting and harvesting activities within a growth cycle.
  • the growth modules are adaptable to monitoring by sensors, sensor arrays and control systems that are capable of automated adjustments to control mechanical operations and growing conditions within the growth chamber and to make continuous improvements to crop yields, visual appeal and nutrient content of the crops grown within the growth modules.
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, the control system comprising: a sensor configured for measuring an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data; a device configured for measuring a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to generate crop growth data; and a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module receiving the environmental condition data and the crop growth data; a software module applying an algorithm to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition; and a software module generating instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved environmental growing condition.
  • control system further comprises at least one of the following: a software module configured to regulate temperature; a software module configured to regulate humidity; a software module configured to regulate gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content; a software module configured to regulate airflow; a software module configured to regulate air pressure; a software module configured to regulate flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit, in response to the instructions.
  • a software module configured to regulate temperature
  • a software module configured to regulate humidity a software module configured to regulate gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content
  • a software module configured to
  • the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants in an aqueous nutrient solution
  • the environmental growing conditions comprise: the temperature of the nutrient solution; the pH of the nutrient solution; the electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; the air temperature in the controlled environment; the humidity in the controlled environment; the ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment; the ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment; the airflow in the controlled environment; the nutrient solution flow rate; the nutrient composition of the nutrient solution; the temperature of the controlled environment; the light quality in the controlled environment; and the light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • the crop characteristic is a leaf area index of the crop plant and wherein the device comprises a digital imaging apparatus configured and positioned for measuring the leaf area index.
  • the crop characteristic is plant weight.
  • the crop characteristic is sugar content.
  • the crop characteristic is acidity.
  • the sensor is configured for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on a second growth module, wherein the second growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming system.
  • the sensor units contains a plurality of the sensors to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the growth modules that the environmental condition for any other growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level.
  • the control system further comprises at least one additional sensor measuring another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data, wherein the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data; further wherein the software module is configured for applying an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions, and wherein the software module is configured for generating instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the growth module in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved environmental growing conditions.
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; a device that measures a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data; a sensor for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming growing chamber, wherein the sensor measures an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed and temperature, further wherein the sensor unit measures
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system, to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, a temperature of the controlled environment, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in
  • control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO 2 and/or O 2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions.
  • a software module configured to regulate a temperature
  • a software module configured to regulate a humidity a software
  • the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • the crop characteristic is plant mass. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity.
  • control system further comprises a plurality of the sensors placed in a plurality of sensor units to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the crop growth modules that the environmental condition for any other crop growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level.
  • control system further comprises at least one additional sensor that measures another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data
  • the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; further wherein the software module is configured to apply an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions and store the improved environmental growing conditions in the memory, and wherein the software module is configured for generating and transmitting the instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the crop growth modules to a sub-system in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing conditions.
  • a sensor system for use in measuring two or more crop growing conditions in an environmentally controlled growth system comprising: a sensor unit configured for mounting in and/or to a first growth module within a vertical growth tower within the growth system, the growth module configured to: stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within the vertical growth tower; permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution to another growth module below itself within the tower, wherein the sensor unit is further configured to, when mounted in and/or to the first growth module: measure and collect input data corresponding to a first crop growing condition at a plant canopy level outside of the growth module, and measure and collect input data corresponding to at least a second crop growing condition, wherein the first crop growing condition is selected from the group comprising humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, and temperature, and wherein the second crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • the sensor unit comprises one or more of a first temperature sensor, a CO 2 level sensor, and a humidity sensor.
  • the sensor system further comprises a data transmitter inside of a sensor unit housing for transmitting collected input data to a master box, wherein the master box collects, organizes and collates the received input data.
  • the sensor unit housing is water resistant, and one or more of the temperature sensor, the CO 2 level sensor, and the humidity sensor are configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module.
  • the sensor unit further comprises: an environmental ambient air speed sensor; an air pressure sensor; a light spectrum sensor; or any combination thereof which are configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module.
  • the sensor unit further comprises at least one of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor, configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • a nutrient concentration sensor an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor, configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • EC electrical conductivity
  • the master box further comprises: a wireless receiver to receive transmitted input data from sensor units in the environmentally controlled growth system; a digital processing device comprising an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory; a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data from the plurality of sensor units and transmits the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system for a vertical farming system configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data; and a wireless transmitter to transmit the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • a wireless receiver to receive transmitted input data from sensor units in the environmentally controlled growth system
  • a digital processing device comprising an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory
  • a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data from the plurality of sensor units and transmits the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system for a vertical farming system configured to
  • the nutrient concentration sensor is adapted to measure, in the aqueous crop nutrient solution, an aqueous concentration of at least one of: zinc; molybdenum; manganese; iron; copper; chlorine; boron; sulfur; magnesium; calcium; potassium; phosphorus; and nitrogen.
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; a device that measures a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data; a sensor for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming growing chamber, wherein the sensor measures an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed, air pressure and temperature of the controlled environment,
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system, to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO 2 and/or O 2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; or a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions.
  • a software module configured to regulate a temperature
  • a software module configured to regulate a humidity a software
  • the senor for placement in the sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module further measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the second crop growth module over time.
  • the second environmental growing condition comprises a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • the environmental growing condition comprises: an air temperature inside the crop growth module; a humidity inside the crop growth module; an airflow inside the crop growth module; a temperature of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; a flow rate of the aqueous nutrient solution; an aqueous nutrient concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved O 2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved CO 2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity (EC) of the aqueous nutrient solution; or a nutrient composition of the aqueous nutrient solution.
  • ORP water oxidation reduction potential
  • the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber, the control system operating in the vertical farming growing chamber; a sensor unit configured for mounting in or on a first crop growth module of the vertical farming system, the first crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself, wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the first crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed and temperature, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the first crop growth module over time, the second environmental growing condition comprising a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution; a device that measures data corresponding to a crop characteristic of crops growing in the second crop growth module; a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions
  • control system further comprises a software module configured to regulate at least one growing condition in response to instructions, the at least one growing condition selected from the group consisting of: a temperature; a humidity; a gaseous or an aqueous CO 2 or and/or O 2 content; an airflow speed; an air pressure; a flow rate of an aqueous nutrient solution to be supplied to crop plants growing in the crop growth modules; an aqueous nutrient concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) of the aqueous nutrient solution; an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) of the aqueous nutrient solution; a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light emitting source; and a movement of the at least first and second crop growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • the at least one growing condition selected from the group consisting of: a temperature; a humidity; a gaseous or an aqueous
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least first and second stacked crop growth modules and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber
  • the control system comprising: a sensor unit configured for mounting in or on the first growth module of the vertical farming system, the first growth module configured to stack with the second growth module below itself within the vertical farming system and permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution to the second growth module; the sensor unit configured for measuring data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, and temperature; the sensor unit further configured for measuring data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the first growth module over time, the second environmental growing condition a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution; a device measuring data corresponding to a crop characteristic of crops growing in the second growth module; a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions
  • control system of further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate temperature; a software module configured to regulate humidity; a software module configured to regulate gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content; a software module configured to regulate airflow; a software module configured to regulate air pressure; a software module configured to regulate flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit, in response to the instructions.
  • a software module configured to regulate temperature a software module configured to regulate humidity
  • a software module configured to regulate gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content
  • a software module configured to regulate
  • the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants in an aqueous nutrient solution
  • the environmental growing condition comprises: temperature of the nutrient solution; pH of the nutrient solution; electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; air temperature in the controlled environment; humidity in the controlled environment; ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment; ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment; airflow in the controlled environment; nutrient solution flow rate; nutrient composition of the nutrient solution; temperature of the controlled environment light quality in the controlled environment; or light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • the crop characteristic is a leaf area index of the crop plant and wherein the device comprises a digital imaging apparatus configured and positioned for measuring the leaf area index.
  • the crop characteristic is plant weight. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity.
  • the sensor is configured for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on a second growth module, wherein the second growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming system.
  • the control system further comprises a plurality of the sensors placed in the sensor units to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the growth modules that the environmental condition for any other growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level.
  • control system further comprises at least one additional sensor measuring another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data, wherein the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data; further wherein the software module is configured for applying an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions, and wherein the software module is configured for generating instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the growth module in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved environmental growing conditions.
  • the sensor unit further comprises one or more of a first temperature sensor, a CO 2 level sensor, and a humidity sensor.
  • the sensor system further comprises a data transmitter inside of a sensor unit housing for transmitting collected input data to a master box, wherein the master box collects, organizes and collates the received input data.
  • the sensor unit housing is water resistant, and one or more of the temperature sensor, the CO 2 level sensor, and the humidity sensor are configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module.
  • the sensor unit further comprises an environmental ambient air speed sensor; an air pressure sensor; a light spectrum sensor; or any combination thereof configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module.
  • the sensor unit further comprises at least one of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor, configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • a nutrient concentration sensor an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor, configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • EC electrical conductivity
  • the master box further comprises: a wireless receiver to receive transmitted input data from sensor units in the environmentally controlled growth system; a digital processing device comprising an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory; a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data from the plurality of sensor units and transmits the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system for a vertical farming system configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data; and a wireless transmitter to transmit the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • a wireless receiver to receive transmitted input data from sensor units in the environmentally controlled growth system
  • a digital processing device comprising an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory
  • a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data from the plurality of sensor units and transmits the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system for a vertical farming system configured to
  • the nutrient concentration sensor is adapted to measure, in the aqueous crop nutrient solution, an aqueous concentration of at least one of: zinc; molybdenum; manganese; iron; copper; chlorine; boron; sulfur; magnesium; calcium; potassium; phosphorus; and nitrogen.
  • a computer-implemented method for operating a control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, the method comprising: training a machine learning algorithm to identify a plurality of recommended environmental growing conditions for a crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system by providing historic environmental growing condition data and crop growth data; receiving real-time data from a plurality of sensors, each sensor measuring an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber; receiving real-time data from a device, the device measuring a crop characteristic of the crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system; and applying the trained machine learning algorithm to the real-time data from the plurality of sensors and the real-time data from the device to generate instructions for adjustment of each of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the recommended environmental growing conditions.
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants in an aqueous nutrient solution
  • the environmental growing condition comprises: temperature of the nutrient solution, pH of the nutrient solution, electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, air temperature in the controlled environment, humidity in the controlled environment, ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, airflow in the controlled environment, nutrient solution flow rate, nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, temperature of the controlled environment light quality in the controlled environment, or light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • the crop characteristic is a leaf area index of the crop plant and wherein the device comprises a digital imaging apparatus configured and positioned for measuring the leaf area index.
  • the crop characteristic is plant weight. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity. In some embodiments, the sensors are configured for placement in one or more sensor units mounted in or on growth modules, wherein each growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming system. In some embodiments, the sensors comprise one or more of a first temperature sensor, a CO 2 level sensor, and a humidity sensor.
  • the sensors comprise a nutrient concentration sensor adapted to measure, in an aqueous crop nutrient solution, an aqueous concentration of at least one of: zinc; molybdenum; manganese; iron; copper; chlorine; boron; sulfur; magnesium; calcium; potassium; phosphorus; and nitrogen.
  • the sensors in the one or more sensor units mounted in or on growth modules provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the growth modules that the environmental condition for any other growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level.
  • a computer-implemented method for operating a control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber, the method comprising: training a machine learning algorithm to identify a plurality of recommended environmental growing conditions for a crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system by providing historic environmental growing condition data and crop growth data; receiving real-time data from a plurality of sensors, each sensor measuring an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; receiving real-time data from a device, the device measuring a crop characteristic of the crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system; and applying the trained machine learning algorithm to the real-time data from the plurality of sensors and the real-time data from the measuring device to generate instructions for adjustment of each of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to the recommended environmental growing conditions.
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants, through a nutrient supply system, in response to the environmental condition data measured by the sensor, in an aqueous nutrient solution, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, a temperature of the controlled environment, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in
  • FIG. 1A is an illustrative isometric exterior view of a production farming facility comprising environmentally controlled growing chambers with multi-stage vertical growth systems therein.
  • FIG. 1B is an illustrative isometric exterior cut-away view of a production farming facility comprising environmentally controlled growing chambers with multi-stage vertical growth systems therein.
  • FIG. 2 is an illustrative isometric view of several multi-stage vertical growth systems within one of the environmentally controlled growing chambers.
  • FIG. 3 is another illustrative isometric view of one multi-stage vertical growth system.
  • FIG. 4 is a schematic of a vertical column structure illustrating possible spacing configurations of hydroponic plant growth modules and spacers depending on loading and unloading schemes, the growth cycle of the crop as it could relate to a loading/unloading scheme, the size of the plant in each hydroponic plant growth module and the weight of the growth modules.
  • FIG. 5A is a front view of side-by-side vertical columns with illustrative representations of stacked growth modules comprising at least one lateral growth opening.
  • FIG. 5B is a side view of a vertical column with illustrative representations of stacked growth modules comprising at least one lateral growth opening and intermittent spacer/sensor modules placed between the hydroponic plant growth modules in the vertical column in a different arrangement.
  • FIG. 6A is an illustrative top isometric, side and bottom isometric view of one of many possible configurations of a growth module, illustrating a V-baffle hinge connection, one of many possible hinge configurations.
  • FIG. 6B is an illustrative top view of a spacer/sensor module illustrating a T-baffle hinge connection on a vertical column, one of many possible hinge configurations.
  • FIG. 7A is another illustrative isometric view of one of many possible configurations of a growth module, illustrating a circular design with a plurality of lateral growth openings.
  • FIG. 7B is an illustrative example of a circular growth module configuration on a suspended circular vertical column with a counter-weight to provided added stability.
  • FIG. 7C is another illustrative top view of an alternative FIG. 12A configuration hydroponic plant growth module, illustrating a circular design comprising a plurality of hydroponic plant sub-module growth modules encased in a larger growth module housing.
  • FIG. 7D is illustrative example of a porous growth medium that may be placed into a growth module.
  • FIG. 8A is an illustrative isometric end view of an (optional) superiorly mounted conveyor system capable of moving the coupled vertical columns about a structural support circuit.
  • FIG. 8B is an illustrative side cross-section view of an (optional) superiorly mounted conveyor system capable of moving the coupled vertical columns about a structural support circuit.
  • FIG. 9 is an illustrative schematic of a gravity-feed water and nutrient supply system supporting the vertical farming system.
  • FIG. 10A is an illustrative schematic of the machine learning capability and system controls associated with the automated master control system.
  • FIG. 10B is an illustrative schematic of a control system configured for automatic and routine manual inputs of commands to control the environmental growing conditions of the growing chamber.
  • FIG. 10C is an illustrative schematic of a control system configured for full automated control of the environmental growing conditions of the growing chamber by an artificial intelligence-controlled software module, not requiring routine manual inputs.
  • FIG. 11A is an illustrative top view of a growth module configured for containing a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions.
  • FIG. 11B is an illustrative view of a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions.
  • FIG. 11C is an illustrative view of a growth module containing a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions.
  • FIG. 12A is an illustrative view of a device for placement over an opening of a growth module and having apertures therethrough allowing for one or more sensors to protrude therefrom.
  • FIG. 12B is an illustrative view of a growth module containing a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions, with a device for placement over an opening of the growth module and having apertures therethrough allowing for one or more sensors to protrude therefrom.
  • new control systems 600 capable of machine learning, or artificial intelligence, capable of assimilating thousands or even millions of data points acquired by strategically placed sensors 615 during the course of a growing cycle or multiple growing cycles, and further capable of automatically adjusting the growth conditions 610 for a crop 20 on a year-round basis within the controlled environment such as lighting 108 , fertilizers (nutrients), moisture, gas levels, temperature, air flow, and ultimately, packaging to produce higher yields at a lower cost per square foot, with reduced overall losses per planted crop, better nutritional value, visual appeal and faster growth cycles.
  • fertilizers fertilizers
  • machine learning or artificial intelligence means intelligence exhibited by machines.
  • an ideal “intelligent” machine is a flexible rational agent that perceives its environment and takes actions that maximize its chance of success at some goal.
  • the term “artificial intelligence” is applied when a machine mimics “cognitive” functions that humans associate with other human minds, such as “learning” and “problem solving”.
  • machines become increasingly capable, facilities once thought to require intelligence are removed from the definition. For example, optical character recognition is no longer perceived as an exemplar of “artificial intelligence” having become a routine technology.
  • Capabilities still classified as AI include advanced Chess and Go systems and self-driving cars.
  • the central problems (or goals) of AI research include reasoning, knowledge, planning, learning, natural language processing (communication), perception and the ability to move and manipulate objects.
  • General intelligence is among the field's long-term goals.
  • Approaches include statistical methods, computational intelligence, soft computing (e.g. machine learning), and traditional symbolic AI.
  • Many tools are used in AI, including versions of search and mathematical optimization, logic, methods based on probability and economics.
  • the AI field draws upon computer science, mathematics, psychology, linguistics, philosophy, neuroscience and artificial psychology.
  • the AI system herein comprises various sensors and circuit boards that optionally include a Raspberry Pi (a series of credit card-sized single-board computers) or chickens (an open-source prototyping platform) that either through wifi, radio frequency, wires, or other mechanism communicate to a server that can store data in the cloud, or a hard drive, or in a data historian. Humans may play some role in the form of gathering, analyzing, or manipulating this data.
  • Raspberry Pi a series of credit card-sized single-board computers
  • PCs an open-source prototyping platform
  • various illustrative logical blocks, modules, and circuits described in connection with the embodiments disclosed herein may be implemented or performed with a general purpose processor, a digital signal processor (DSP), an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), a field programmable gate array (FPGA) or other programmable logic device, discrete gate or transistor logic, discrete hardware components, or any combination thereof designed to perform the functions described herein.
  • DSP digital signal processor
  • ASIC application specific integrated circuit
  • FPGA field programmable gate array
  • a general purpose processor may be a microprocessor, but in the alternative, the processor may be any conventional processor, controller, microcontroller, or state machine.
  • a processor may also be implemented as a combination of computing devices, e.g., a combination of a DSP and a microprocessor, a Raspberry PI further comprising them, a plurality of microprocessors, one or more microprocessors in conjunction with a DSP core, or any other such configuration.
  • Software associated with such modules may reside in RAM memory, flash memory, ROM memory, EPROM memory, EEPROM memory, registers, a hard disk, a removable disk, a CD-ROM, or any other suitable form of storage medium known in the art.
  • An exemplary storage medium is coupled to the processor such the processor can read information from, and write information to, the storage medium. In the alternative, the storage medium may be integral to the processor.
  • the processor and the storage medium may reside in an ASIC.
  • a controller for use of control of the IVT comprises a processor (not shown).
  • the Automated Control System and or the Master Control System for the multi-stage, automated growth system described herein includes a digital processing device, or use of the same.
  • the digital processing device includes one or more hardware central processing units (CPU) that carry out the device's functions.
  • the digital processing device further comprises an operating system configured to perform executable instructions.
  • the digital processing device is optionally connected a computer network.
  • the digital processing device is optionally connected to the Internet such that it accesses the World Wide Web.
  • the digital processing device is optionally connected to a cloud computing infrastructure.
  • the digital processing device is optionally connected to an intranet.
  • the digital processing device is optionally connected to a data storage device.
  • suitable digital processing devices include, by way of non-limiting examples, server computers, desktop computers, laptop computers, notebook computers, sub-notebook computers, netbook computers, netpad computers, set-top computers, media streaming devices, handheld computers, Internet appliances, mobile smartphones, tablet computers, personal digital assistants, video game consoles, and vehicles.
  • server computers desktop computers, laptop computers, notebook computers, sub-notebook computers, netbook computers, netpad computers, set-top computers, media streaming devices, handheld computers, Internet appliances, mobile smartphones, tablet computers, personal digital assistants, video game consoles, and vehicles.
  • smartphones are suitable for use in the system described herein.
  • Suitable tablet computers include those with booklet, slate, and convertible configurations, known to those of skill in the art.
  • the digital processing device includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions.
  • the operating system is, for example, software, including programs and data, which manages the device's hardware and provides services for execution of applications.
  • suitable server operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD®, Linux, Apple® Mac OS X Server®, Oracle® Solaris®, Windows Server®, and Novell® NetWare®.
  • suitable personal computer operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Microsoft® Windows®, Apple® Mac OS X®, UNIX®, and UNIX-like operating systems such as GNU/Linux®.
  • the operating system is provided by cloud computing.
  • suitable mobile smart phone operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Nokia® Symbian® OS, Apple® iOS®, Research In Motion® BlackBerry OS®, Google® Android®, Microsoft® Windows Phone® OS, Microsoft® Windows Mobile® OS, Linux®, and Palm® WebOS®.
  • suitable media streaming device operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Apple TV®, Roku®, Boxee®, Google TV®, Google Chromecast®, Amazon Fire®, and Samsung® HomeSync®.
  • video game console operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Sony® PS3®, Sony® PS4®, Microsoft® Xbox 360®, Microsoft Xbox One, Nintendo® Wii®, Nintendo® Wii U®, and Ouya®.
  • the device includes a storage and/or memory device.
  • the storage and/or memory device is one or more physical apparatuses used to store data or programs on a temporary or permanent basis.
  • the device is volatile memory and requires power to maintain stored information.
  • the device is non-volatile memory and retains stored information when the digital processing device is not powered.
  • the non-volatile memory comprises flash memory.
  • the non-volatile memory comprises dynamic random-access memory (DRAM).
  • the non-volatile memory comprises ferroelectric random access memory (FRAM).
  • the non-volatile memory comprises phase-change random access memory (PRAM).
  • the device is a storage device including, by way of non-limiting examples, CD-ROMs, DVDs, flash memory devices, magnetic disk drives, magnetic tapes drives, optical disk drives, and cloud computing based storage.
  • the storage and/or memory device is a combination of devices such as those disclosed herein.
  • the digital processing device includes a display to send visual information to a user.
  • the display is a cathode ray tube (CRT).
  • the display is a liquid crystal display (LCD).
  • the display is a thin film transistor liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD).
  • the display is an organic light emitting diode (OLED) display.
  • OLED organic light emitting diode
  • on OLED display is a passive-matrix OLED (PMOLED) or active-matrix OLED (AMOLED) display.
  • the display is a plasma display.
  • the display is a video projector.
  • the display is a combination of devices such as those disclosed herein.
  • the digital processing device includes an input device to receive information from a user.
  • the input device is a keyboard.
  • the input device is a pointing device including, by way of non-limiting examples, a mouse, trackball, track pad, joystick, game controller, or stylus.
  • the input device is a touch screen or a multi-touch screen.
  • the input device is a microphone to capture voice or other sound input.
  • the input device is a video camera or other sensor to capture motion or visual input.
  • the input device is a Kinect, Leap Motion, or the like.
  • the input device is a combination of devices such as those disclosed herein.
  • the Automated Control System and or the Master Control System for the multi-stage, automated growth system disclosed herein includes one or more non-transitory computer readable storage media encoded with a program including instructions executable by the operating system of an optionally networked digital processing device.
  • a computer readable storage medium is a tangible component of a digital processing device.
  • a computer readable storage medium is optionally removable from a digital processing device.
  • a computer readable storage medium includes, by way of non-limiting examples, CD-ROMs, DVDs, flash memory devices, solid state memory, magnetic disk drives, magnetic tape drives, optical disk drives, cloud computing systems and services, and the like.
  • the program and instructions are permanently, substantially permanently, semi-permanently, or non-transitorily encoded on the media.
  • the Automated Control System and or the Master Control System for the multi-stage, automated growth system disclosed herein includes at least one computer program, or use of the same.
  • a computer program includes a sequence of instructions, executable in the digital processing device's CPU, written to perform a specified task.
  • Computer readable instructions may be implemented as program modules, such as functions, objects, Application Programming Interfaces (APIs), data structures, and the like, that perform particular tasks or implement particular abstract data types.
  • APIs Application Programming Interfaces
  • a computer program comprises one sequence of instructions. In some embodiments, a computer program comprises a plurality of sequences of instructions. In some embodiments, a computer program is provided from one location. In other embodiments, a computer program is provided from a plurality of locations. In various embodiments, a computer program includes one or more software modules. In various embodiments, a computer program includes, in part or in whole, one or more web applications, one or more mobile applications, one or more standalone applications, one or more web browser plug-ins, extensions, add-ins, or add-ons, or combinations thereof.
  • the term “about” or “approximately” means an acceptable error for a particular value as determined by one of ordinary skill in the art, which depends in part on how the value is measured or determined. In certain embodiments, the term “about” or “approximately” means within 1, 2, 3, or 4 standard deviations. In certain embodiments, the term “about” or “approximately” means within 30%, 25%, 20%, 15%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, 0.5%, 0.1%, or 0.05% of a given value or range.
  • the term “about” or “approximately” means within 40.0 mm, 30.0 mm, 20.0 mm, 10.0 mm 5.0 mm 1.0 mm, 0.9 mm, 0.8 mm, 0.7 mm, 0.6 mm, 0.5 mm, 0.4 mm, 0.3 mm, 0.2 mm or 0.1 mm of a given value or range.
  • the term “about” or “approximately” means within 20.0 degrees, 15.0 degrees, 10.0 degrees, 9.0 degrees, 8.0 degrees, 7.0 degrees, 6.0 degrees, 5.0 degrees, 4.0 degrees, 3.0 degrees, 2.0 degrees, 1.0 degrees, 0.9 degrees, 0.8 degrees, 0.7 degrees, 0.6 degrees, 0.5 degrees, 0.4 degrees, 0.3 degrees, 0.2 degrees, 0.1 degrees, 0.09 degrees. 0.08 degrees, 0.07 degrees, 0.06 degrees, 0.05 degrees, 0.04 degrees, 0.03 degrees, 0.02 degrees or 0.01 degrees of a given value or range.
  • the terms “connected”, “operationally connected”, “coupled”, “operationally coupled”, “operationally linked”, “operably connected”, “operably coupled”, “operably linked,” and like terms refer to a relationship (mechanical, linkage, coupling, etc.) between elements whereby operation of one element results in a corresponding, following, or simultaneous operation or actuation of a second element. It is noted that in using said terms to describe inventive embodiments, specific structures or mechanisms that link or couple the elements are typically described. However, unless otherwise specifically stated, when one of said terms is used, the term indicates that the actual linkage or coupling may take a variety of forms, which in certain instances will be readily apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the relevant technology.
  • radial is used here to indicate a direction or position that is perpendicular relative to a longitudinal axis.
  • axial refers to a direction or position along an axis that is parallel to a main or longitudinal axis.
  • similar components labeled similarly for example, axis 1011 A and axis 1011 B
  • axis 1011 for example, axis 1011 .
  • anterior means the front surface of an apparatus or structure; often used to indicate the position of one structure relative to another, that is, situated nearer the front part of an apparatus or structure.
  • the term “posterior” means the back surface of an apparatus or structure; Often used to indicate the position of one structure relative to another, that is, nearer the back of an apparatus or structure.
  • the term “superior” refers to an apparatus or structure and means situated above or nearer the vertex of the head in relation to a specific reference point; opposite of inferior. It may also mean situated above or directed upward.
  • the term “inferior” refers to an apparatus or structure and means situated nearer the soles of the feet in relation to a specific reference point; opposite of superior. It may also mean situated below or directed downward.
  • lateral means denoting a position farther from the median plane or midline of an apparatus or a structure. It may also mean “pertaining to a side”.
  • the term “medial” means, situated toward the median plane or midline of an apparatus or structure.
  • the terms “comprises”, “comprising”, or any other variation thereof, are intended to cover a nonexclusive inclusion, such that a process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises a list of elements does not include only those elements but may include other elements not expressly listed or inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus.
  • the term “vertical growth assembly” means a tower assembly comprising a plurality of growth modules, or alternately means a vertical column or vertical growth column comprising a plurality of growth modules.
  • the tower assembly comprises either a supported tower or an unsupported, self-standing tower.
  • the vertical column typically comprises a vertical support member having a plurality of growth modules affixed thereto.
  • the vertical support member may affix to an outer edge of a growth module container or through an interior portion thereof.
  • light intensity refers to or photosynthetically active radiation [PAR] or photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD).
  • PAR photosynthetic photon flux density
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system 1000 , 1001 includes a plurality of vertical growth systems 101 in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber 100 , for example a greenhouse.
  • FIGS. 1A and 1B depict external and cut-away views of exemplary facilities with growing chambers for use with control systems of the present disclosure.
  • the control system includes a sensor or group of sensors 615 , which measures one or more environmental growing conditions 610 in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate corresponding environmental condition data 645 .
  • the sensor(s) 615 is, for example, an air temperature sensor, a humidity sensor, or a sensor for measuring gaseous carbon dioxide content.
  • the sensor(s) may also sense numerous other environmental conditions, including air pressure, air flow, gaseous oxygen content, light quality (e.g.: spectral properties of natural or artificial light), and/or light quantity (e.g.: light intensity or length of light/dark cycles). Alternatively or additionally, the sensor(s) may measure one or more properties of an aqueous nutrient solution which may be provided to crops growing in the vertical farming system, for example in a hydroponic vertical farming system.
  • the sensor may also sense a rate of movement of growing plants, for example as such plants are moved up or down a vertical growth tower, and/or around a growing circuit in the vertical farming system.
  • the sensor may be part of a sensor array 30 , suitable for measuring any combination of environmental growing conditions 610 , including any possible combination of the conditions described in this paragraph.
  • An exemplary sensor is depicted at FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B , adapted for placement in the plant growth module, spacer module or sensor module 104 / 105 / 110 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B .
  • the sensor system comprises a sensor module 110 , a sensor circuit board 31 , a sensor mounting port 32 , a sensor battery pack 33 , a sensor nose mount 34 , a sensor nose 35 , a sensor circuit mounting board 37 configurable for mounting a sensor 615 (not shown) or a crop characteristic measuring device 625 (not shown) and a digital imaging device/crop characteristic device mounting port 38 .
  • the sensor and/or sensor array measures the environmental growing condition(s) continually, or at intervals during the growing cycle of the crop plant grown in the vertical farming system.
  • the environmental growing condition data generated by the sensor or sensor array may, for example, provide a “fingerprint” corresponding to one or more environmental conditions experienced by a growing crop plant over time over the course of its growth, for example up until the time of harvest.
  • the data may correspond with only two or more time points during the course of the plant's growth cycle.
  • the sub-system is selected from the group consisting of: a lighting control sub-system (not shown); a HVAC control sub-system (not shown); a nutrient supply control sub-system (not shown); a conveyance control sub-system (not shown); and a vertical lift mechanism control sub-system (not shown).
  • the vertical farming system also includes one or more devices 625 for measuring a quantifiable crop characteristic of a crop grown in the growth module, to generate corresponding crop growth data 645 .
  • the device may be a digital imaging device, such as a digital camera, suitable for capturing images of growing crop plants which may be used for generating measurements of leaf area index (LAI).
  • LAI leaf area index
  • the device may also be for measuring the weight, sugar content, water content, acidity, or other properties of the crop plant.
  • the device(s) may generate crop characteristic data corresponding with any one or more of the measured quantifiable crop characteristic(s).
  • the device may be positionable within the vertical farming system such that it may measure the quantifiable characteristic during plant growth, and/or after harvest.
  • a digital imaging apparatus may be stationary, and positioned such that it captures digital images of crop plants as they pass by while travelling around a growth circuit.
  • the apparatus may be mounted to a drone which flies about the vertical farming system capturing images of growing plants.
  • the vertical farming system control system 600 also includes a processing device 635 , which includes a processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module 665 configured for receiving the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor or sensor array 615 , 30 and the measuring device 625 ; a software module configured to apply an algorithm 655 to the environmental growing condition data 610 and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions 671 / 672 / 674 for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the hydroponic plant growth module to a sub-system 675 / 685 of the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing condition.
  • a processing device 635 includes a processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module 665 configured for receiving the environmental condition data and the
  • the processing device may also include a receiver, for receiving transmitted data, and/or a transmitter, for transmitting data.
  • the receiver and transmitter (not shown) may be configured for wired, and/or wireless receipt or transmission of data.
  • the computer program includes instructions which may be executed by the processing device to create an application.
  • the application includes a software module 665 , which is configured to receive environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). It also includes a software module that applies an algorithm 655 to the environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and to the crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). By application of the algorithm, one or more improved environmental growing condition(s) are generated.
  • the processing device also includes a software module that generates instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition(s) in or around the crop growth module to the improved environmental growing condition.
  • the algorithm may be applied to data corresponding with a particular air temperature over the course of a crop's growing cycle, which represents an increase over a previous measured air temperature, and data corresponding to the crop's leaf area index, which represents an increase over the leaf area index of a crop grown under the previously measured air temperature conditions.
  • the newly measured temperature would represent an improved environmental growing condition.
  • the software module would then generate instructions for adjusting the temperature in or around the crop growing module. The temperature could then be adjusted, either automatically, or with human intervention.
  • Some control systems may be configured to automatically monitor and adjust the growing condition(s) in response to the instructions.
  • the measured crop characteristic may represent a decrease in leaf area index, and instructions would be generated for adjusting the temperature back to the previously measured temperature, corresponding with a larger leaf area index.
  • a plurality of two, three, or four or more environmental conditions would be measured over time during the crop cycle, and application of the algorithm to data corresponding with this combination of measured environmental conditions would generate improved growing conditions for each of the measured conditions. For example, instructions for adjustment to improved levels of any combination of air temperature, humidity, gaseous carbon dioxide, and/or any combination of characteristics of an aqueous nutrient solution may be generated.
  • the control system may include one or more software modules configured for regulating one or more of temperature, humidity, gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content, airflow, air pressure, flow of water and nutrients, aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution, aqueous pH, water or aqueous oxidation reduction potential (ORP), aqueous electrical conductivity (EC), a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source, and movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • software modules configured for regulating one or more of temperature, humidity, gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content, airflow, air pressure, flow of water and nutrients, aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution, aqueous pH, water or aqueous oxidation reduction potential (ORP), aqueous electrical conductivity (EC), a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source, and movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • ORP
  • the computer control system or master control system 600 comprises: an input variable server 620 , a Fog Node 630 , a SCADA interface 640 to provide instantaneous automatic control 650 , Cloud Servers 660 , Graphical Displays 670 , the ability to accommodate and provide Real Time Queries 680 and software systems providing Deep Learning, Artificial Intelligence programming 690 .
  • the master control system 600 monitors growth conditions 610 of the enclosed production farming facility 1000 , 1001 , the growth chambers 100 and individual hydroponic plant growth modules 104 in each vertical growth system 101 , analyzing the input data from the monitored growth conditions 610 provided by the sensors 615 and crop characteristic measuring devices 625 , sent to the senor arrays 30 and subsequently transmitted to the master control system 600 for processing. Once this data is collected and analyzed, the master control system 600 is configured, through Deep Learning, Artificial Intelligence programming 690 , to adjust growth conditions by sending out new instructions 671 , 672 , 674 to the various environmental control systems 675 , 685 and nutrient control systems 300 in order to improve and continually optimize the output characteristics 695 of the crop.
  • the output characteristics 695 of the crop comprise nutrition levels, weight, growth (manufacturing/production) costs, color or appearance, flavor and/or texture.
  • the sensor(s) may be configured for placement in a sensor unit 110 , which itself is configurable for placement in a separate growth module 104 or a sensor module 105 , which may or may not include a growing plant therein.
  • This second “dummy” growth module 105 to (and/or inside of) which the sensor is mounted, may be configured to stackably support other growth modules above or below itself within a vertical growth tower, all within the vertical growth system.
  • sensors 615 are distributed about one or more vertical growth towers, each corresponding with a position of a growth module within the growth tower. In preferred examples, a sufficient number of sensors is used such that environmental data (corresponding with one or more environmental condition(s) generated by this plurality of sensors such that the environmental condition(s) at any position within the tower (or within the system) may be predicted with 95% statistical confidence.
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules 104 in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber 100 ; a device that measures a crop characteristic 625 of a crop 20 grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data 645 ; a sensor 615 for placement in a sensor unit 110 mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower 102 in the vertical farming growing chamber 100 , wherein the sensor 615 , 30 measures an environmental growing condition 610 in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber 100 over time to generate environmental condition data 645 , further wherein the sensor unit 110 measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition 610
  • control system further comprises a processing device 635 comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module 655 configured to receive the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; a software module configured to apply an algorithm 655 to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition and store the improved environmental growing condition in the memory; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the crop growth module to a sub-system of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing condition.
  • a processing device 635 comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module 655 configured to receive the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; a software module configured to apply an algorithm 655 to the
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system 300 , to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, a temperature of the controlled environment, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an air
  • the nutrient supply system 300 is configured to direct the aqueous crop nutrient solution from a master water reservoir 310 , pumped up to the tops of the vertical growth columns via a pump and piping system 320 , and distributed through the upper opening of the hydroponic plant growth module when mounted to the vertical growth column 102 , in a controlled flow, allowing the water and nutrients 305 to percolate through the hydroponic plant growth modules located on each vertical growth column.
  • additional distribution points at lower points along the vertical column may also be utilized for secondary distribution of water with balanced nutrient levels to account for losses and absorption in the hydroponic plant growth modules above.
  • the remaining water and nutrients that leave the lowest hydroponic plant growth module is collected in a pan 330 , recycled to the master water reservoir 330 where the nutrient levels are automatically analyzed and again replenished to optimal levels before repeating the cycle.
  • control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO 2 and/or O 2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions.
  • a software module configured to regulate a temperature
  • a software module configured to regulate a humidity a software
  • the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • the crop characteristic is plant mass. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity.
  • control system further comprises a plurality of the sensors placed in a plurality of sensor units to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the crop growth modules that the environmental condition for any other crop growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level.
  • control system further comprises at least one additional sensor that measures another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data
  • the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; further wherein the software module is configured to apply an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions and store the improved environmental growing conditions in the memory, and wherein the software module is configured for generating and transmitting the instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the crop growth modules to a sub-system in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing conditions.
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; a device that measures a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data; a sensor for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming growing chamber, wherein the sensor measures an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed, air pressure and temperature of the controlled environment,
  • the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system, to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO 2 and/or O 2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; or a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions.
  • a software module configured to regulate a temperature
  • a software module configured to regulate a humidity a software
  • the senor for placement in the sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module further measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the second crop growth module over time.
  • the second environmental growing condition comprises a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • the environmental growing condition comprises: an air temperature inside the crop growth module; a humidity inside the crop growth module; an airflow inside the crop growth module; a temperature of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; a flow rate of the aqueous nutrient solution; an aqueous nutrient concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved O 2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved CO 2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity (EC) of the aqueous nutrient solution; or a nutrient composition of the aqueous nutrient solution.
  • ORP water oxidation reduction potential
  • the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • FIGS. 1A and 1B depict external views of exemplary growing chambers for use with control systems of the present disclosure.
  • the sensor system includes a sensor unit 110 , which is configured to be mounted in, or on, a growth module in a vertical growth tower within the growth system.
  • the growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules, above and/or below itself in the vertical growth tower.
  • the growth module is also configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution, for example a solution typically used in hydroponic agriculture, to another growth module below itself within the tower.
  • the growth module may have an aperture that allows for flow of the solution through the module, or it may permit the solution to flow around and/or over itself, down toward a module below.
  • the module may itself be configured appropriately to contain a growing crop plant.
  • the module may have a lateral growth opening allowing for a growing plant to grow laterally from the module, with roots housed in the module.
  • the module may be a “dummy” module, which is representative of other growth modules in terms of stackability and permission of nutrient solution vertical flow, but is not itself configured to contain a growing plant.
  • the sensor unit 110 is configured to, when mounted in, to and/or on the growth module, measure and collect input data.
  • the input data corresponds with a crop growing condition outside of the growth module at a plant canopy level.
  • the plant canopy level corresponds with the area where either a) a growing plant canopy exists (the plant growing out of an opening 106 in the growth module 104 ), orb) the region in space corresponding with where a growing plant's canopy would be, if the growth module did contain a growing plant.
  • An exemplary sensor is depicted at FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B adapted for placement in the growth module 104 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B .
  • an area adjacent to each growth module will correspond with an area of plant canopy for each growing lettuce plant.
  • the area may be, for example, adjacent to a lateral growth opening 106 in the growth module 104 .
  • the area may occupy approximately the area of one growing lettuce (or other plant species, as appropriate) plant.
  • the area may occupy a region in space comprising, for example, about a 3′′ 6′′, 9′′, 12′′, 15′′, 18′′, 21′′, or 24′′ layer adjacent to the growth module.
  • the sensor unit 110 is configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with a first crop growing condition at the plant canopy level, outside of the growth module.
  • spacer modules 105 could be stacked above, below and between sensor modules 110 , and hydroponic plant growth modules 104 to create adequate growth areas and under-canopy spacing between growing plants during the growth cycle. Additionally, the intra-growth module space could be increased during the growth cycle, as needed to accommodate extra growth and to optimize logistical spacing in the growth column during the growth cycle.
  • FIGS. 4 and 5B illustrate where spacer modules 105 (and/or sensor modules 110 ) are configured to be placed in single or multiple layers between hydroponic plant growth modules. The placement of these additional modules can occur at any time in the growth cycle, in the initial seeding stages, or during the middle or later growth stages, using either manual or automated loading and conveyor systems as will be described hereinafter.
  • hydroponic plant growth modules 104 and spacer modules 105 are configured with expandable wall height means 25 , as illustrated in FIGS. 6A and 7B .
  • the expandable hydroponic plant growth modules provide additional means to generate alternate, non-standard module heights to accommodate larger plant crops and achieve a logistically preferable spacing between hydroponic plant growth modules.
  • At least one growing condition 610 measured at the plant canopy level is temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide
  • the sensor unit may accordingly comprise a temperature sensor, a carbon dioxide sensor, and/or a humidity sensor or hygrometer. Monitoring each of these growing conditions at the plant canopy level is thought to be important for measuring the likely health of a growing crop plant.
  • the sensor unit may also comprise one or more of an ambient air speed sensor, an air pressure sensor, or a sensor for measuring light quality or quantity, at the plant canopy level.
  • the sensor unit is also configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with at least one other, or “second” crop growing condition.
  • the “second” crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution provided by the nutrient supply system 300 .
  • nutrients and water are supplied to the growing plants (housed within the growth modules, themselves stacked within the vertical growth towers) in an aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • Such crop nutrient solutions possess numerous measurable and quantifiable characteristics, one or more of which may be measured by the sensor.
  • the sensor unit may include one or more of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor.
  • a nutrient concentration sensor an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor.
  • EC electrical conductivity
  • ORP water oxidation reduction potential
  • this sensor may be configured to sense concentration, in the nutrient solution, of one or more of zinc, molybdenum, manganese, iron, copper, chlorine, boron, sulfur, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen.
  • the sensor system also includes a transmitter (not shown), which is configured for transmitting (wirelessly and/or by wire) collected input data to a master box, which collects, organizes, and collates the received data.
  • the master box may include a wireless receiver (not shown), for receiving the transmitted input data from the sensor units.
  • It may also include a digital processing device 635 , which includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory. It may also include a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data, and to transmit the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system.
  • the control system 600 may be configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions 610 in the environmentally controlled growth environment 100 in response to the input data.
  • the master box may itself also include a transmitter, for transmission of the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • the sensor unit is waterproof or water resistant.
  • the sensor system comprises a sensor module 110 , a sensor circuit board 31 , a sensor mounting port 32 , a sensor battery pack 33 , a sensor nose mount 34 , a sensor nose 35 , a sensor circuit mounting board 37 , configurable for mounting a sensor 615 (not shown) or a crop characteristic measuring device 625 (not shown) and a digital imaging device/crop characteristic device mounting port 38 .
  • the sensor unit includes a waterproof “nose” 35 configured for placement over an opening of a growth module 24 , which may be made of plastic or some other suitable material, the nose including one, two, three or more apertures 32 , 38 .
  • the “nose” is not permeable to water, but is permeable to gases, thus permitting for passage of gases therethrough and not liquids, further permitting insulation of carbon dioxide or other gas sensors for use in an environment frequently exposed to wet conditions.
  • Protruding from the apertures in the “nose” may be one or more sensors 615 , for sensing one or more environmental conditions at a plant canopy level, for example, temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide content.
  • the sensor(s) for sensing the “first” crop growing condition at a plant canopy level are in functional communication, either wirelessly or by wire, with the sensor(s) for sensing the “second” crop growing condition of the nutrient solution.
  • the sensor unit may be adapted to fit within a plant growth unit 104 , through or around which nutrient solution flows during plant growth.
  • the sensor unit may include one or more sensors for sensing the “second” crop growth condition (of the nutrient solution) inside the growth unit, while also including one or more sensors protruding from a growth opening in the growth unit, positioned in space corresponding with where a growing plant canopy would be, and sensing the “first” growth condition at the plant canopy level.
  • the sensor nose mount 34 and the sensor nose 35 provide a water-tight seal to the sensor module 110 , wherein the (at least) moisture resistant sensors 615 (not shown) inserted in the sensor mounting port 32 and/or the (at least) moisture resistant crop characteristic measuring device 625 (not shown) inserted in the digital imaging device/crop characteristic device mounting port 38 are capable of obtaining environmental and crop characteristic data while keeping moisture and other environmental factors out of the sensor module which could potentially affect longevity of the module, the sensors, the crop characteristic measuring device, the sensor circuit board 31 , and the sensor circuit mounting board 37 or the integrity of the data measured.
  • a transmitter (not shown) embedded within the sensor module is capable of transmitting the measured data to a master control system 600 associated with the computer-implemented control system for the vertical farm system.
  • a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farm system includes at least two (a “first” and a “second”) stacked crop growth modules, the system for operation in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, for example a greenhouse.
  • FIGS. 1A and 1B depict external views of exemplary growing chambers for use with control systems of the present disclosure.
  • the control system includes at least one sensor unit.
  • An exemplary sensor is depicted in FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B , adapted for placement in the plant growth module, spacer module or sensor module 104 / 105 / 110 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B .
  • the sensor unit is configured to be mounted in, or on, the “first” growth module, which itself is configured to stack with the “second” growth module in a vertical growth tower within the growth system.
  • the “first” growth module is also configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution, for example a solution typically used in hydroponic agriculture, to another growth module below itself within the tower.
  • the growth module may have an aperture that allows for flow of the solution through the module, or it may permit the solution to flow around and/or over itself, down toward a module below.
  • the module may itself be configured appropriately to contain a growing crop plant.
  • the module may have a lateral growth opening allowing for a growing plant to grow laterally from the module, with roots housed in the module.
  • the module may be a “dummy” module, which is representative of other growth modules in terms of stackability and permission of nutrient solution vertical flow, but is not itself configured to contain a growing plant.
  • the sensor unit is configured to, when mounted in, to and/or on the “first” growth module, measure and collect input data.
  • the input data corresponds with a crop growing condition outside of the growth module at a plant canopy level.
  • the plant canopy level corresponds with the area where either a) a growing plant canopy exists (the plant growing out of an opening in the growth module), or b) the region in space corresponding with where a growing plant's canopy would be, if the growth module did contain a growing plant.
  • an area adjacent to each growth module will correspond with an area of plant canopy for each growing lettuce plant.
  • the area may be, for example, adjacent to a lateral growth opening in the growth module.
  • the area may occupy approximately the area of one growing lettuce (or other plant species, as appropriate) plant.
  • the area may occupy a region in space comprising, for example, about a 3′′ 6′′, 9′′, 12′′, 15′′, 18′′, 21′′, or 24′′ layer adjacent to the growth module.
  • the sensor unit is configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with a first crop growing condition at the plant canopy level, outside of the “first” growth module.
  • At least one growing condition measured at the plant canopy level is temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide
  • the sensor unit may accordingly comprise a temperature sensor, a carbon dioxide sensor, and/or a humidity sensor or hygrometer. Monitoring each of these growing conditions at the plant canopy level is thought to be important for measuring the likely health of a growing crop plant.
  • the sensor unit may also comprise one or more of an ambient air speed sensor, an air pressure sensor, or a sensor for measuring light quality or quantity, at the plant canopy level.
  • the sensor unit is also configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with at least one other, or “second” crop growing condition.
  • the “second” crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • nutrients and water are supplied to the growing plants (housed within the growth modules, themselves stacked within the vertical growth towers) in an aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • Such crop nutrient solutions possess numerous measurable and quantifiable characteristics, one or more of which may be measured by the sensor.
  • the sensor unit may include one or more of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor.
  • a nutrient concentration sensor an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor.
  • EC electrical conductivity
  • ORP water oxidation reduction potential
  • this sensor may be configured to sense concentration, in the nutrient solution, of one or more of zinc, molybdenum, manganese, iron, copper, chlorine, boron, sulfur, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen.
  • the sensor system also includes a transmitter, which is configured for transmitting (wirelessly and/or by wire) collected input data to a master box, which collects, organizes, and collates the received data.
  • the master box may include a wireless receiver, for receiving the transmitted input data from the sensor units. It may also include a digital processing device, which includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory. It may also include a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data, and to transmit the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system.
  • the control system may be configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data.
  • the master box may itself also include a transmitter, for transmission of the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • the sensor unit is waterproof or water resistant.
  • the sensor unit includes a waterproof “nose”, which may be made of plastic or some other suitable material, the nose including one, two, three or more apertures. Protruding from the apertures in the “nose” are one or more sensors, for sensing one or more environmental conditions at a plant canopy level, for example, temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide content.
  • the sensor(s) for sensing the “first” crop growing condition at a plant canopy level are in functional communication, either wirelessly or by wire, with the sensor(s) for sensing the “second” crop growing condition of the nutrient solution.
  • the sensor unit may be adapted to fit within a plant growth unit, through which nutrient solution flows during plant growth.
  • the sensor unit may include one or more sensors for sensing the “second” crop growth condition (of the nutrient solution) inside the growth unit, while also including one or more sensors protruding from a growth opening in the growth unit, positioned in space corresponding with where a growing plant canopy would be, and sensing the “first” growth condition at the plant canopy level.
  • the sensor may measure the environmental growing condition(s) continually, or at intervals during the growing cycle of the crop plant grown in the vertical farming system.
  • the environmental growing condition data generated by the sensor may, for example, provide a “fingerprint” corresponding to one or more environmental conditions experienced by a growing crop plant over time over the course of its growth, for example up until the time of harvest.
  • the data may correspond with only two or more time points during the course of the plant's growth cycle.
  • the vertical farming system also includes a device for measuring a quantifiable crop characteristic of a crop grown in the growth module, to generate corresponding crop growth data.
  • the device may be a digital imaging device, such as a digital camera, suitable for capturing images of growing crop plants which may be used for generating measurements of leaf area index (LAI).
  • LAI leaf area index
  • the device may also be for measuring the weight, sugar content, water content, acidity, or other properties of the crop plant. It may generate crop characteristic data corresponding with any one or more of the measured quantifiable crop characteristic(s).
  • the device may be positionable within the vertical farming system such that it may measure the quantifiable characteristic during plant growth, and/or after harvest.
  • a digital imaging apparatus may be stationary, and positioned such that it captures digital images of crop plants as they pass by while travelling around a growth circuit.
  • the apparatus may be mounted to a drone which flies about the vertical farming system capturing images of growing plants.
  • the vertical farming system also includes a processing device, which includes a processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program.
  • the processing device may also include a receiver, for receiving transmitted data, and/or a transmitter, for transmitting data.
  • the receiver and transmitter may be configured for wired, and/or wireless receipt or transmission of data.
  • the computer program includes instructions which may be executed by the processing device to create an application.
  • the application includes a software module, which is configured to receive environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). It also includes a software module that applies an algorithm to the environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and to the crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). By application of the algorithm, one or more improved environmental growing condition(s) are generated.
  • the processing device also includes a software module that generates instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition(s) in or around the crop growth module to the improved environmental growing condition.
  • the algorithm may be applied to data corresponding with a particular air temperature over the course of a crop's growing cycle, which represents an increase over a previous measured air temperature, and data corresponding to the crop's leaf area index, which represents an increase over the leaf area index of a crop grown under the previously measured air temperature conditions.
  • the newly measured temperature would represent an improved environmental growing condition.
  • the software module would then generate instructions for adjusting the temperature in or around the crop growing module. The temperature could then be adjusted, either automatically, or with human intervention.
  • Some control systems may be configured to automatically monitor and adjust the growing condition(s) in response to the instructions.
  • the measured crop characteristic may represent a decrease in leaf area index, and instructions would be generated for adjusting the temperature back to the previously measured temperature, corresponding with a larger leaf area index.
  • a plurality of two, three, or four or more environmental conditions would be measured over time during the crop cycle, and application of the algorithm to data corresponding with this combination of measured environmental conditions would generate improved growing conditions for each of the measured conditions. For example, instructions for adjustment to improved levels of any combination of air temperature, humidity, gaseous carbon dioxide, and/or any combination of characteristics of an aqueous nutrient solution may be generated.
  • the control system may include one or more software modules configured for regulating one or more of temperature, humidity, gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content, airflow, air pressure, flow of water and nutrients, aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution, aqueous pH, water or aqueous oxidation reduction potential (ORP), aqueous electrical conductivity (EC), a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source, and movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • software modules configured for regulating one or more of temperature, humidity, gaseous or aqueous CO 2 or O 2 content, airflow, air pressure, flow of water and nutrients, aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution, aqueous pH, water or aqueous oxidation reduction potential (ORP), aqueous electrical conductivity (EC), a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source, and movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • ORP
  • numerous sensors are distributed about the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to provide environmental data corresponding with their individual positions.
  • sensors are distributed about one or more vertical growth tower, each corresponding with a position of a growth module within the growth tower.
  • a sufficient number of sensors is used such that environmental data (corresponding with one or more environmental condition(s) generated by this plurality of sensors such that the environmental condition(s) at any position within the tower (or within the system) may be predicted with 95% statistical confidence.
  • a computer-implemented method for operating a control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber.
  • the method includes training a machine learning algorithm to identify a plurality of recommended environmental growing conditions for a crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system by providing historic environmental growing condition data and crop growth data.
  • the method includes the following steps:
  • the sensors may be configured to be mounted in, or on, a “first” growth module, which itself is configured to stack with a “second” growth module in a vertical growth tower within the growth system.
  • An exemplary sensor is depicted in FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B , adapted for placement in the plant growth module, spacer module or sensor module 104 / 105 / 110 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B .
  • the “first” growth module is configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution, for example a solution typically used in hydroponic agriculture, to another growth module below itself within the tower.
  • the growth module may have an aperture that allows for flow of the solution through the module, or it may permit the solution to flow around and/or over itself, down toward a module below.
  • the module may itself be configured appropriately to contain a growing crop plant.
  • the module may have a lateral growth opening allowing for a growing plant to grow laterally from the module, with roots housed in the module.
  • the module may be a “dummy” module, which is representative of other growth modules in terms of stackability and permission of nutrient solution vertical flow, but is not itself configured to contain a growing plant.
  • the sensor may be configured to, when mounted in, to and/or on the “first” growth module, measure and collect input data.
  • the input data corresponds with a crop growing condition outside of the growth module at a plant canopy level.
  • the plant canopy level corresponds with the area where either a) a growing plant canopy exists (the plant growing out of an opening in the growth module), or b) the region in space corresponding with where a growing plant's canopy would be, if the growth module did contain a growing plant.
  • an area adjacent to each growth module will correspond with an area of plant canopy for each growing lettuce plant.
  • the area may be, for example, adjacent to a lateral growth opening in the growth module.
  • the area may occupy approximately the area of one growing lettuce (or other plant species, as appropriate) plant.
  • the area may occupy a region in space comprising, for example, about a 3′′ 6′′, 9′′, 12′′, 15′′, 18′′, 21′′, or 24′′ layer adjacent to the growth module.
  • the sensor unit is configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with a first crop growing condition at the plant canopy level, outside of the “first” growth module.
  • At least one growing condition measured at the plant canopy level may be temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide
  • the sensor unit may accordingly comprise a temperature sensor, a carbon dioxide sensor, and/or a humidity sensor or hygrometer. Monitoring each of these growing conditions at the plant canopy level is thought to be important for measuring the likely health of a growing crop plant.
  • the sensor unit may also comprise one or more of an ambient air speed sensor, an air pressure sensor, or a sensor for measuring light quality or quantity, at the plant canopy level.
  • the sensor may also configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with at least one other, or “second” crop growing condition.
  • the “second” crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • nutrients and water are supplied to the growing plants (housed within the growth modules, themselves stacked within the vertical growth towers) in an aqueous crop nutrient solution.
  • Such crop nutrient solutions possess numerous measurable and quantifiable characteristics, one or more of which may be measured by the sensor.
  • the sensor unit may include one or more of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor.
  • a nutrient concentration sensor an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O 2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO 2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor.
  • EC electrical conductivity
  • ORP water oxidation reduction potential
  • this sensor may be configured to sense concentration, in the nutrient solution, of one or more of zinc, molybdenum, manganese, iron, copper, chlorine, boron, sulfur, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen.
  • the senor may be incorporated within a system which also includes a transmitter, which is configured for transmitting (wirelessly and/or by wire) collected input data to a master box, which collects, organizes, and collates the received data.
  • the master box may include a wireless receiver, for receiving the transmitted input data from the sensor units. It may also include a digital processing device, which includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory. It may also include a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data, and to transmit the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system.
  • the control system may be configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data.
  • the master box may itself also include a transmitter, for transmission of the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • the sensor unit is waterproof or water resistant.
  • the sensor unit includes a waterproof “nose”, which may be made of plastic or some other suitable material, the nose including one, two, three or more apertures. Protruding from the apertures in the “nose” are one or more sensors, for sensing one or more environmental conditions at a plant canopy level, for example, temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide content.
  • the sensor(s) for sensing the “first” crop growing condition at a plant canopy level are in functional communication, either wirelessly or by wire, with the sensor(s) for sensing the “second” crop growing condition of the nutrient solution.
  • the sensor unit may be adapted to fit within a plant growth unit, through which nutrient solution flows during plant growth.
  • the sensor unit may include one or more sensors for sensing the “second” crop growth condition (of the nutrient solution) inside the growth unit, while also including one or more sensors protruding from a growth opening in the growth unit, positioned in space corresponding with where a growing plant canopy would be, and sensing the “first” growth condition at the plant canopy level.
  • the sensor may measure the environmental growing condition(s) continually, or at intervals during the growing cycle of the crop plant grown in the vertical farming system.
  • the environmental growing condition data generated by the sensor may, for example, provide a “fingerprint” corresponding to one or more environmental conditions experienced by a growing crop plant over time over the course of its growth, for example up until the time of harvest.
  • the data may correspond with only two or more time points during the course of the plant's growth cycle.
  • Devices for use with methods of the present disclosure may be configured for measuring a quantifiable crop characteristic of a crop grown in the growth module, to generate corresponding crop growth data.
  • the device may be a digital imaging device, such as a digital camera, suitable for capturing images of growing crop plants which may be used for generating measurements of leaf area index (LAI).
  • LAI leaf area index
  • the device may also be for measuring the weight, sugar content, water content, acidity, or other properties of the crop plant. It may generate crop characteristic data corresponding with any one or more of the measured quantifiable crop characteristic(s).
  • the device may be positionable within the vertical farming system such that it may measure the quantifiable characteristic during plant growth, and/or after harvest.
  • a digital imaging apparatus may be stationary, and positioned such that it captures digital images of crop plants as they pass by while travelling around a growth circuit.
  • the apparatus may be mounted to a drone which flies about the vertical farming system capturing images of growing plants.
  • the algorithm may be applied to data corresponding with a particular air temperature over the course of a crop's growing cycle, which represents an increase over a previous measured air temperature, and data corresponding to the crop's leaf area index, which represents an increase over the leaf area index of a crop grown under the previously measured air temperature conditions.
  • the newly measured temperature would represent an improved environmental growing condition.
  • the software module would then generate instructions for adjusting the temperature in or around the crop growing module. The temperature could then be adjusted, either automatically, or with human intervention.
  • Some control systems may be configured to automatically monitor and adjust the growing condition(s) in response to the instructions.
  • the measured crop characteristic may represent a decrease in leaf area index, and instructions would be generated for adjusting the temperature back to the previously measured temperature, corresponding with a larger leaf area index.
  • a plurality of two, three, or four or more environmental conditions would be measured over time during the crop cycle, and application of the algorithm to data corresponding with this combination of measured environmental conditions would generate improved growing conditions for each of the measured conditions. For example, instructions for adjustment to improved levels of any combination of air temperature, humidity, gaseous carbon dioxide, and/or any combination of characteristics of an aqueous nutrient solution may be generated.
  • numerous sensors are distributed about the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to provide environmental data corresponding with their individual positions.
  • sensors are distributed about one or more vertical growth tower, each corresponding with a position of a growth module within the growth tower.
  • a sufficient number of sensors is used such that environmental data (corresponding with one or more environmental condition(s) generated by this plurality of sensors such that the environmental condition(s) at any position within the tower (or within the system) may be predicted with 95% statistical confidence.
  • control systems of the present disclosure may comprise growth modules stackable in vertical growth towers.
  • sensor systems of the present disclosure may be include sensors suitable for mounting in, or, or to such stackable growth modules.
  • Vertical growth towers of the present disclosure may include: a plurality of growth modules, each growth module comprising: an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant; a drain aperture in the enclosure; and at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the enclosure; wherein one or more of the growth modules is configured to stackably support one or more of the other growth modules above and/or below itself within the tower, wherein the drain aperture is configured to facilitate vertical flow of fluids between growth modules within the tower, and wherein said lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module.
  • a vertical growth tower 102 or simply a “tower”, is illustrated with a plurality of growth modules 104 stacked vertically, one on top of another.
  • Each growth module 104 may be placed directly on top of the prior growth module, or spaced apart, with or without a “spacer” 105 between each growth module, depending on the stage of the growth cycle. Spacers, when used, are optionally configured with holes 13 to allow for passage of airflow and moisture between vertically-spaced growth modules.
  • Each module is configured as an enclosure with at least one lateral growth opening 106 , configured to permit and encourage growth of a plant laterally, away from the growth module.
  • the plant growth module 104 is configured for: containing and supporting hydroponic plant growth media, for containing and supporting a root structure of at least one crop plant 20 growing therein; the at least one crop plant being of a gravitropic plant species, wherein the plants roots grow generally in the direction of gravitational pull (i.e., downward) and stems grow generally in the opposite direction (i.e., upwards). Additionally, the utilization of the lateral growth opening and resulting lateral growth of a plant provides an opportunity for better circulation of airflow from a variety of directions, to better disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of a plant, thus minimizing stagnant moisture accumulation and the potential for undesired biologic growth (i.e.: fungus, etc.).
  • An enclosure stack utilized in a particular tower or columnar growth structure is configured from a plethora of potential shapes, but generally speaking, all growth modules within a particular tower or columnar growth structure would ideally be the same shape. Alternatively, it is also conceived that the enclosures could have different shapes for the containment component of the growth module, but be configured with identical mounting components on the top and/or bottom that would allow for stacking of different shaped growth modules.
  • the plurality of growth modules is an unsupported, self-standing tower.
  • a vertical growth tower is configured to stand as an unsupported, self-standing tower. This is possible due to the construction of the containment shape of the growth module.
  • the containment shape is configurable to allow for the growth modules to potentially snap, press-fit, or otherwise snugly adhere to one another in a vertical fashion, providing stability to the structure
  • a growth module is configured to provide a containment shape comprising: a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a square shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; a geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • FIGS. 6A through 6C, 7A through 7C three such configurations are illustrated.
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate a growth module having a containment shape that is representative of a rectangular shape or a square shape; whereas FIG. 7A illustrates a growth module having a containment shape that is representative of a completely circular shape; and FIG.
  • FIG. 7C illustrates a composite growth module assembly having an assembly and containment shape that is representative of any number of shapes, depending on how they are described, including a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; a geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • At least one of the growth modules has an adjustable height to accommodate growth of the at least one plant. Still further, in some embodiments the hydroponic plant growth modules 104 and spacer modules 105 are configured with expandable wall height means 25 , as illustrated in FIGS. 6A and 7B .
  • the growth modules are alternately configured to have adjustable sizing. This is desirable for a number of reasons and possible in a number of ways. At any given time during a plant growth cycle, it is desirable to provide more space between plants as they mature. By providing expandable growth modules, the space between stacked modules is easily accomplished without the need to transplant the plant to a new, larger/taller module.
  • the telescoping walls can come in at least two configurations; wherein a number of sliding, telescoping panels affixed to the outside of the containment shape, are movably and lockably adjusted to telescope up or down on the outside of the containment shape, providing additional air gap space between adjacent modules without changing the internal containment shape holding the growth medium and the plant.
  • the telescoping walls can be integral to the containment shape, so that when the top and bottom of the containment walls of the growth module are pulled in opposite directions, the internal volume and external height of height of the growth module increases, providing a larger gap between the lateral openings of adjacent growth modules.
  • the tower further comprises at least a partial lower surface connected to the containment shape.
  • the drain aperture is positioned in or near the at least partial lower surface.
  • the at least partial lower surface optionally comprises a non-perpendicular surface relative to the containment shape, configured to facilitate the movement of fluids toward the drain aperture.
  • FIG. 6A illustrates a growth module with 3 complete sides and an incomplete, but connected fourth side with a lateral growth opening, a partially open upper surface and a partially open lower surface.
  • the lateral growth opening may alternately be a hole of any shape in any complete and/or connected side of the containment shape.
  • the partial lower surface provides for a drain aperture to facilitate vertical movement of fluids and nutrients from an upper growth module to a lower growth module. In the event of a solid or complete lower surface in the growth module, at least one drain hole would be provided. Additionally, the lower surface is optionally configured to have a slope that would encourage gravitational flow of the fluids and nutrients towards the drain aperture.
  • the tower further comprises at least a partial upper surface connected to the containment shape.
  • each growth module is orientable in a different direction from at least one other growth module within the tower.
  • some embodiments of the growth modules comprising the tower are alternately configured to have either open upper surfaces or partially open upper surfaces to, either of which are configurable to support stacking.
  • the growth modules are configured to promote stacking, such that the at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure of each module can be oriented in the same direction or an alternate direction to the growth module above or below it, simply be rotating the enclosure and securing the symmetric attachment features of the growth modules to the one above or below it.
  • FIG. 7A illustrates a circular growth module with multiple lateral growth openings in the containment shape.
  • the illustrated growth module is stackable.
  • the stackable assembly is possible with or without a central or support column. In the absence of a central column, a central hole would/could provide a conduit for airflow, additional fluid flow or nutrient supply conduits, for example.
  • the illustrated module comprises both an upper and lower surface, and further comprises multiple apertures in both the top and bottom (not shown) surfaces to facilitate gravitational flow of the fluids and nutrients and vertical drainage to another growth module below.
  • FIG. 7C illustrates a top view of another circular growth module configuration on an optional circular vertical column, comprising a stackable sleeve configured to hold multiple growth modules.
  • this module illustrates just one possible arrangement of multiple lateral growth openings in the containment shape.
  • the stackable sleeve assembly is possible with or without a central support column. In the absence of a central column, a central hole would/could provide a conduit for airflow, additional fluid flow or nutrient supply conduits, for example.
  • a sleeve is configured with multiple slots or cut away sections configured to hold internally-captured growth modules, or alternately, sub-modules.
  • the inventors have also conceived of similar sleeved or compartmented module designs, mimicking the variety of containment shapes described previously for growth modules.
  • the growth module is configured to hold a plurality of internally-captured growth modules or alternately, sub-modules.
  • the internally-captured modules can be a standard or alternate shape, larger, the same or smaller in size than a regular production version of a growth module configured to accommodate a plant size at maturity.
  • any growth module is not limited. Growth modules can all be of a common size or be scaled larger or smaller as needed to accommodate the need. For example, newly germinated plants could be placed in a small, starter modules (of any shape), and placed in a sleeved containment module. Or newly germinated plants could be placed in a standard module (of any shape), and placed in a much larger sleeved containment module. Further still, newly germinated plants could be placed in small, starter modules (of any shape), and placed directly into a tower or vertical growth assembly, then later, transplanted into larger growth modules, if needed and replaced in the vertical growth assembly. Or alternately, the newly germinated plants could be placed in a standard module (of any shape), and placed directly into a tower or vertical growth assembly where it will remain for the entire growth cycle
  • a top end of the unsupported, self-standing tower 102 is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying growth modules toward or away from the tower.
  • a bottom end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying growth modules toward or away from the tower.
  • a top end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a support structure 103 capable of supporting a plurality other unsupported, self-standing towers 102 .
  • the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured to rotate about its vertical axis when attached to the support structure for similarly exposing the attached enclosures to a light source and/or an airflow.
  • the conveyance system provides a controlled, timed movement of each unsupported, self-standing tower, in unison with the other unsupported, self-standing towers attached to the conveyance system, to move a plant contained within the plurality of enclosures from a starting point location corresponding with an immature growth stage to a finishing point corresponding with a harvestable plant along a circuit within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, for example as depicted in FIGS. 2 and 3 .
  • FIG. 8A one notes that the inventors have considered the inclusion of a conveyance system to facilitate the movement of the vertical growth assembly to provide for a regular cyclic rotation of crops from a germination stage to a harvest stage.
  • a conveyance system to facilitate the movement of the vertical growth assembly to provide for a regular cyclic rotation of crops from a germination stage to a harvest stage.
  • one potential configuration of the conveyance system is attached to a vertical support structure as shown in FIG. 3 , and connects to the vertical growth assembly at the top.
  • the conveyance system is configured to move a plurality of tower or columnar assemblies about a circuit within the environmentally controlled growing chamber, for example as depicted in FIGS. 2 and 3 .
  • the conveyance system can be a vertically driven 200 ( a ), a bottom driven conveyance system (not shown), or combination of both.
  • the top-mounted conveyance components 200 ( a ) comprise rollers 202 , guiderails 203 mounted to the support structure 103 , and vertical column hangers 204 for mounting directly to the vertical column 102 .
  • the hangers 204 are configurable to allow the vertical columns 104 to hang freely, if unsupported at the bottom, or to spin, if desired, as noted above.
  • the conveyance system is configured to connect to the bottom of the vertical growth assembly.
  • the conveyance system on the bottom of the vertical growth assembly may be the same or different in configuration with the top conveyance system.
  • the bottom conveyance system is optionally configured to be a conveyor belt system, such as one used in airport luggage handling systems. This system is specifically designed to allow for turning the vertical growth assembly around the turns in a circuit, and optionally also provides the ability to rotate the entire vertical growth assembly about its central axis.
  • the conveyance system is alternately equipable with a hanger system capable of providing suspension of the vertical growth assembly.
  • the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 50.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 40.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 30.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 25.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 20.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 19.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 18.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 17.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 16.0 feet tall; or approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 15.0 feet tall.
  • the environmentally controlled vertical farming system is specifically designed to take greenhouse-like farming to a massive scale.
  • the scale and size of the vertical growth structures, the towers and/or vertical growth column is only limited by the size and height of the facility holding the environmentally controlled vertical farming system and the capacity of the stacked growth modules, vertical growth columns, support structures and optional conveyance systems to support their collective weights.
  • the unsupported, self-standing tower is conceivably between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 100.0 feet tall, or more.
  • the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall, where facilities permit.
  • the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and anywhere between approximately 15.0 feet to approximately 50.0 feet tall, as available facilities for these sizes are more common.
  • a vertical column for a vertical farming system configured for detachable attachment to at least one growth module
  • the vertical column comprising a periphery having: a square shape; a rectangular shape; a generally circular shape; a partially circular shape; triangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; any geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof;
  • the growth module comprises: a sleeve configured to hold a plurality of sub-growth modules; a housing configured to hold a plurality of sub-growth modules, each sub-growth module comprising an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant; a drain aperture in the growth module; and at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure and/or at least one sub-growth module configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the growth module; wherein the growth module is configured to stackably support
  • the vertical column further comprising at least one attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to the growth module.
  • the at least one attachment mechanism comprises: a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof.
  • the at least one attachment mechanism is on a longitudinal surface of said vertical column. In some embodiments, the at least one attachment mechanism is on a longitudinal surface of said vertical column. In some embodiments, the at least one growth module is attached in a radial pattern about the periphery of the vertical column.
  • the vertical column comprises a vertical internal or external support column.
  • the support column can have a variety of peripheral shapes comprising a square shape; a rectangular shape; a generally circular shape; a partially circular shape; triangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; any geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof, and is preferably at least partially hollow on the interior, but not required to be. Modules slide over, or onto the support column is some embodiments.
  • they attach to an attachment mechanism such as a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof.
  • an attachment mechanism such as a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof.
  • FIGS. 5A through 5C illustrate the concept of a “T”-rail or a “V”-rail on the vertical column for fixing the growth modules.
  • the growth module further comprises a corresponding attachment mechanism such as a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof to facilitate attachment to the vertical column.
  • a corresponding attachment mechanism such as a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof to facilitate attachment to the vertical column.
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate the concept of a corresponding “T”-rail or a “V”-rail on the growth modules for fixing the m to the vertical support column.
  • attachment mechanisms could be placed on any longitudinal surface of the column, allowing for radial placement of the non-circular growth modules circumferentially around the vertical column.
  • the growth module of any one of the previously described configurations are detachably attachable to a vertical column with an external device comprising; a ring; a clamp; a collar; a bar collar; a quick-release clamp; a hose-type clamp; a magnet; a thru-pin; a cotter pin; a detachably attachable container affixed to the vertical column and configured to contain the growth module therein; or any combination thereof; wherein the detachably attachable container is configured to allow a stand-alone growth module to be slidably removed from the vertical column while leaving the detachably attachable container affixed to the vertical column.
  • the attachment mechanism is configured for placement either: between the growth module and column, adjacent to the growth module and column, or attached to both the vertical column and the growth module in order to provide both fixation and separated spacing of the growth modules along the vertical height of the column, such as: a ring; a clamp; a collar; a bar collar; a quick-release clamp; a hose-type clamp; a magnet; a thru-pin; a cotter pin; a detachably attachable container affixed to the vertical column and configured to contain the growth module therein; or any combination thereof.
  • FIG. 5C illustrates the use of an external clamp used to augment the fixation between the vertical column and the growth module.
  • a collar; a bar collar; a quick-release clamp; a hose-type clamp; a cotter pin; a magnetic ring or a through-hole and retaining pin are utilized to provide spacing between modules along the column.
  • the vertical column is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying the growth module to and/or away from the vertical column. In some embodiments, the vertical column configured for attachment to the conveyance system at a bottom end and/or a top end of the vertical column.
  • the vertical column configurations are configured for attachment to a conveyance system, with or without an auxiliary support structure, as illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 8A .
  • a top end of the vertical column is configured for attachment to a support structure capable of supporting a plurality other vertical columns.
  • the vertical column is configured to rotate about its vertical axis when attached to the support structure for uniformly exposing the attached growth modules to a light source and/or an airflow during each rotation.
  • the vertical column is configured to hang from a support structure that allows the vertical column to rotate about its axis. Additionally, with at least one configuration it is shown that the growth module is able to spin about the column, even as the column spins. In still other embodiments, the vertical column is configured to rotate as a rotating pendulum, as illustrated in FIG. 7B , where suspended weights are utilized to balance the column and add inertia to the mass.
  • An additional benefit of any such rotating column or tower is the idea of self-induced airflow wherein a plant extending from a lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module.
  • a column or tower is configured to rotate, either by means of a conveyance system or as a suspended, rotating pendulum, airflow is induced around and through the extended under-canopy of the plant, which in turn will disrupt the boundary of the plants under-canopy.
  • the vertical column is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 50.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 40.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 30.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 25.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 20.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 19.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 18.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 17.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 16.0 feet tall; or approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 15.0 feet tall.
  • vertical growth column height is only limited by the size and height of the facility holding the environmentally controlled vertical farming system and the capacity of the stacked growth modules, vertical growth columns, support structures and optional conveyance systems to support their collective weights.
  • the vertical growth column is conceivably between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 100.0 feet tall, or more.
  • the vertical growth column is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall, where facilities permit.
  • the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and anywhere between approximately 20.0 feet to approximately 50.0 feet tall, as available facilities for these sizes are more common.
  • the vertical column is configured to provide at least one of: a forced airflow conduit; and a gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit; wherein the forced airflow conduit and the gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit are optionally, within the interior of the vertical column, or on the exterior of the vertical column, with ports accessible to and from an attached growth module of any shape.
  • a potentially preferred embodiment of the vertical growth column is at least partially hollow on the interior, but not required to be.
  • a forced airflow conduit and a water nutrient conduit are configured to optimally provide a steady, gravity-fed supply of air, water and nutrients to attached growth modules via selective ports located along the column.
  • the conveyance system provides a controlled, timed movement of each unsupported, self-standing tower, in unison with the other unsupported, self-standing towers attached to the conveyance system, to move a plant contained within the plurality of enclosures from a starting point location corresponding with an immature growth stage to a finishing point corresponding with a harvestable plant along a circuit within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, for example as depicted in FIGS. 2 and 3 .
  • a conveyance system to facilitate the movement of the vertical growth assembly to provide for a regular cyclic rotation of crops from a germination stage to a harvest stage.
  • one potential configuration of the conveyance system is attached to a vertical support structure as shown in FIG. 3 , and connects to the vertical growth assembly at the top.
  • the conveyance system is configured to move a plurality of tower or columnar assemblies about a circuit within the environmentally controlled growing chamber.
  • the conveyance system is configured to connect to the bottom of the vertical growth assembly.
  • the conveyance system on the bottom of the vertical growth assembly may be the same or different in configuration with the top conveyance system.
  • the bottom conveyance system is optionally configured to be a conveyor belt system, such as one used in airport luggage handling systems. This system is specifically designed to allow for turning the vertical growth assembly around the turns in a circuit, and optionally also provides the ability to rotate the entire vertical growth assembly about its central axis.
  • the conveyance system is alternately equipable with a hanger system capable of providing suspension of the vertical growth assembly
  • the column is configured to adapt to an adjustment in height of at least one of the growth modules so as to accommodate growth of the at least one plant.
  • Growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include: an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant; a drain aperture in the enclosure; and at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the growth module; wherein the growth module is configured to support a plurality of growth modules stacked above and/or below itself, wherein the drain aperture is configured to facilitate vertical flow of fluids from the growth module to another growth module stacked below itself, and wherein said lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module.
  • the enclosure is configured to provide a containment shape comprising: a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a square shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; a geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • the growth module further comprises at least a partial lower surface connected to the containment shape.
  • the drain aperture is positioned in or near the at least partial lower surface.
  • the at least partial lower surface optionally comprises a non-perpendicular surface relative to the containment shape, configured to facilitate the movement of fluids toward the drain aperture.
  • the growth module further comprises at least a partial upper surface connected to the containment shape.
  • the plurality of stacked growth modules is an unsupported, self-standing tower.
  • an unsupported, self-standing tower comprising a plurality of the growth modules of as previously described, wherein the plurality of stacked growth modules is configurable in a radially positioned orientation, and wherein the at least one lateral growth opening of each growth module is orientable in a different direction from the lateral growth opening of the growth module above and or below itself.
  • the growth module of any one of the previously described configurations further comprise an attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to a vertical column.
  • the attachment mechanism comprises: a “T”-bar; a “V” bar; a hinge; a live hinge; a fixed lip; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch, a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; and any combination thereof; wherein the live hinge is further configured to allow a growth module to be opened or closed to allow for the insertion of removal of a plant from the growth module. As shown in more detail and in the non-limiting configurations in FIGS.
  • the hydroponic plant growth module 104 is configured to be mounted to the vertical column through one or a combination of fixed attachment features 109 , such as hinges, wires, through-holes, bayonette features, suspension cables, notched steps or grooves.
  • the hydroponic plant growth module additionally comprises a live hinge for detachable fixation to the vertical growth columns.
  • the hydroponic plant growth module additionally comprises a fixed lip or hinge arrangement or a (separable) ring for detachable fixation to the vertical growth columns.
  • the hydroponic plant growth modules 104 and spacer modules 105 are configured in alterative shapes and configurations as illustrated in FIGS. 6A through 7C .
  • the hydroponic plant growth module 104 is configured in a circular disc shape, having a through hole 102 x configured to mate with and secure to the vertical growth column 102 .
  • the vertical growth column 102 is configured in a cylindrical shape, as is the through-hole 102 x of the hydroponic plant growth module 104 .
  • fixation of alternatively shaped hydroponic plant growth modules to the column at fixed vertical locations can be achieved through alternate means comprising wires, through-holes, bayonette features, suspension cables, notched steps or grooves.
  • the shape of the vertical growth column 104 and/or the hydroponic plant growth module through-hole 102 x can be any shape, as illustrated by the growth module configuration in FIG. 7C , illustrating a polygonal configuration.
  • a hydroponic plant growth module 104 can be configured with “sub-modules” 104 s ; comprising a plurality of hydroponic plant sub-module growth modules encased in a larger growth module housing.
  • Each hydroponic plant sub-module 104 s can detachably assemble to a primary hydroponic plant growth module 104 , functions as a separate hydroponic plant growth module, and includes drain holes 13 and a lateral opening 106 .
  • Such a configuration would be ideally suited for smaller plants, seedlings and starter plant growth conditions, allowing for logistically compact growing conditions when spacing is less critical. Starter plants could then be re-seeded into larger hydroponic plant growth modules and placed back into the growth circuit at appropriate times to maintain a continuous growth pattern within the system.
  • FIG. 7B shows a circular hydroponic plant growth module 104 , as described above, configured for vertical suspension from an overhead supporting structure 101 , 103 and/or conveyance system 200 ( a ).
  • a vertical growth column is configured to be free-hanging, and optionally allowed to spin or sway and provided with a counter-weight 40 for added stability.
  • the hydroponic plant growth modules may alternately be configured with or without hydroponic plant sub-modules 104 s , as described above, as well as separable, expandable side-walls 25 .
  • the growth module further comprises a growth medium 111 and a wicking medium (not shown) placed within the enclosure; wherein the wicking medium is wrapped within the growth medium and is configured to contain a root structure of the plant, and wherein the growth medium is configured to support the root structure of the plant 30 contained within the root system and to capture and hold moisture and nutrients, and wherein the wicking medium is configured to direct moisture and nutrients to the root structure of a plant contained therein.
  • a vertical column configured for detachable attachment to the growth module, the vertical column comprising a periphery having: a square shape; a rectangular shape; a generally circular shape; a partially circular shape, triangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; any geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • the vertical column comprises an at least partially hollow interior. In some embodiments, the vertical column is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying the growth module to and/or away from the vertical column.
  • the vertical column configured for attachment to the conveyance system at a bottom end and/or a top end of the vertical column.
  • a top end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a conveyance system.
  • a bottom end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to the conveyance system.
  • the vertical column further comprises at least one attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to the growth module.
  • the at least one attachment mechanism comprises: a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof.
  • the at least one attachment mechanism is on a longitudinal surface of said vertical column.
  • the at least one growth module is attached in a radial pattern about the periphery of the vertical column.
  • the vertical column is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 50.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 40.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 30.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 25.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 20.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 19.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 18.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 17.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 16.0 feet tall; or approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 15.0 feet tall.
  • the vertical column is configured to provide at least one of: a forced airflow conduit; and a gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit; wherein the forced airflow conduit and the gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit are optionally, within the interior of the vertical column, or on the exterior of the vertical column, with ports accessible to and from an attached growth module of any shape.
  • the vertical column is adapted to support a plurality of the growth modules.
  • a top end of the vertical column or the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a support structure capable of supporting a plurality other vertical columns or unsupported, self-standing towers.
  • the vertical column or unsupported, self-standing tower is configured to rotate about its vertical axis when attached to the support structure for similarly exposing the attached growth modules to a light source and/or an airflow.
  • the vertical column further comprises: a guided vertical lift mechanism capable of supporting, raising and lowering the detachably attachable growth modules along the vertical length of the vertical column.
  • the lift mechanism is configured on the exterior or the interior of the vertical column.
  • the plurality of growth modules can be fixed at variable heights to accommodate variable stages of plant growth, with or without spaces between each vertical module.
  • variable heights are adjustable throughout a growth cycle.
  • the plurality of growth modules can be fixed at a plurality of radial positions.
  • the vertical column further comprises, a plurality of loading point locations along the length of the vertical column to facilitate loading and unloading the plurality of growth modules.
  • Certain vertical column or unsupported, self-standing towers suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include any one of the previously described configurations, where the conveyance system provides a controlled, timed movement of each vertical column or unsupported, self-standing tower, in unison with the other vertical columns or unsupported, self-standing towers attached to the conveyance system, to move a plant contained within the plurality of growth modules from a starting point location corresponding with an immature growth stage to a finishing point corresponding with a harvestable plant along a circuit within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber.
  • Certain growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include a growth medium and a wicking medium placed within an enclosure; wherein the wicking medium is wrapped within the growth medium and is configured to contain a root structure of the plant, and wherein the growth medium is configured to support the root structure of the plant contained within the root system and to capture and hold moisture and nutrients, and wherein the wicking medium is configured to direct moisture and nutrients to the root structure of a plant contained therein.
  • Certain growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include a growth medium; a wicking medium; a root cluster of a germinated plant; or any combination thereof; wherein the environmental sensor or environmental sensor array is configured to collect environmental data within and around a growth module and transmit said data to a master control system capable of compiling the environmental data and adjusting environmental conditions within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber containing said growth module.
  • Certain growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include a wicking strip and growth media angularly oriented within the growth module so as to promote the growth of the germinated plant through the lateral growth opening, wherein the angular orientation is an angle comprising between: about 0.0 degrees to about 45.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 40.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 35.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 34.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 33.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 32.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 31.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; or about 0.0 degrees to about 30.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal.
  • Growth modules suitable for use with the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure may comprise an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant, wherein the enclosure further comprises at least two of the following: at least one vertical wall; a drain aperture in the enclosure; at least a partial lower surface connected to the enclosure; at least a partial upper surface connected to the enclosure; at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the growth module; a non-perpendicular, surface relative to the at least one vertical wall; an attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to a vertical column; an environmental sensor; an environment sensor array; a growth medium; and a wicking medium; wherein the enclosure is configured to provide a containment shape comprising: a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a square

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Botany (AREA)
  • Biodiversity & Conservation Biology (AREA)
  • Ecology (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Water Supply & Treatment (AREA)
  • Developmental Biology & Embryology (AREA)
  • Hydroponics (AREA)
  • Greenhouses (AREA)
  • Cultivation Receptacles Or Flower-Pots, Or Pots For Seedlings (AREA)
  • Cultivation Of Plants (AREA)

Abstract

A computer implemented system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, the control system comprising sensors for measuring environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data, a device configured for measuring a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to generate crop growth data and a processing device comprising software modules for receiving the environmental condition data and the crop growth data; applying an algorithm to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition and generating instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the growth module in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved environmental growing condition.

Description

    CROSS-REFERENCE
  • The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/362,380, filed Jul. 14, 2016, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/366,510, filed Jul. 25, 2016 and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/369,520, filed Aug. 1, 2016, which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • This invention relates generally to a vertical hydroponic and aeroponic plant production apparatus and system and, more particularly, the invention relates to a control system configured for use in a vertical hydroponic and aeroponic plant production system comprising a controlled environment allowing for vertical hydroponic and aeroponic crop production in a fraction of the space necessary for traditional plant production techniques.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • During the twentieth century, agriculture slowly began to evolve from a conservative industry to a fast-moving high-tech industry in order to keep up with world food shortages, climate change and societal changes moving away from manually-implemented agriculture techniques increasingly toward computer implemented technologies. In the past, and in many cases still today, farmers only had one growing season to produce the crops that would determine their revenue and food production for the entire year. However, this is changing. With indoor growing as an option and with better access to data processing technologies, among other advanced techniques, the science of agriculture has become more agile. It is adapting and learning as new data is collected and insights are generated.
  • Advancements in technology are making it feasible to control the effects of nature with the advent of “controlled indoor agriculture”. Improved efficiencies in space utilization, lighting, and a better understanding of hydroponics, aeroponics, crop cycles, and advancements in environmental control systems have allowed humans to better recreate environments conducive for agriculture crop growth with the goals of greater yields per square foot, better nutrition and lower cost.
  • The inventors combine advances in agriculture with the increasing technological advances of industry acquired since the industrial revolution. The inventors also incorporate the more recent concept of assembly line automation, and herein have conceived a vertical farming structure within a controlled environment and having columns comprising automated growth modules. The vertical structure is capable of being moved about an automated conveyance system in an open or closed-loop fashion, exposed to precision-controlled lighting, airflow and humidity, with ideal nutritional support.
  • Among those technology advancements is the application of new control systems capable of machine learning, or artificial intelligence, through the assimilation of thousands or even millions of data points acquired by strategically placed sensors during the course of a growing cycle or multiple growing cycles, and further capable of automatically adjusting year-round crop growth conditions within the controlled environment such as lighting, fertilizers (nutrients), moisture, gas levels, temperature, air flow, and ultimately, packaging to produce higher yields at a lower cost per square foot due to plants' vertical growth and increased space efficiency, with reduced overall losses per planted crop, better nutritional value, visual appeal and faster growth cycles.
  • Additionally, a multi-stage, plant growing system has been configured for high density growth and crop yields and includes among other things, towers and/or vertical columns comprising a plurality of interchangeable growth modules, an enclosed controlled environmental growth chamber, sensors or sensor arrays and control systems capable of machine learning wherein the crops are optimally spaced and continually staged in their planting cycles utilizing the interchangeable growth modules to provide an accelerated and continuous annual production yield. The growth modules are capable of being moveably and detachably affixed to vertical columns, or stand-alone towers, within the enclosed controlled environmental growth chamber and support automated staging for planting and harvesting activities within a growth cycle. The growth modules are adaptable to monitoring by sensors, sensor arrays and control systems that are capable of automated adjustments to control mechanical operations and growing conditions within the growth chamber and to make continuous improvements to crop yields, visual appeal and nutrient content of the crops grown within the growth modules.
  • In a first broad aspect provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, the control system comprising: a sensor configured for measuring an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data; a device configured for measuring a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to generate crop growth data; and a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module receiving the environmental condition data and the crop growth data; a software module applying an algorithm to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition; and a software module generating instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved environmental growing condition.
  • In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one of the following: a software module configured to regulate temperature; a software module configured to regulate humidity; a software module configured to regulate gaseous or aqueous CO2 or O2 content; a software module configured to regulate airflow; a software module configured to regulate air pressure; a software module configured to regulate flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit, in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants in an aqueous nutrient solution, and wherein the environmental growing conditions comprise: the temperature of the nutrient solution; the pH of the nutrient solution; the electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; the air temperature in the controlled environment; the humidity in the controlled environment; the ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment; the ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment; the airflow in the controlled environment; the nutrient solution flow rate; the nutrient composition of the nutrient solution; the temperature of the controlled environment; the light quality in the controlled environment; and the light intensity in the controlled environment. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is a leaf area index of the crop plant and wherein the device comprises a digital imaging apparatus configured and positioned for measuring the leaf area index. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is plant weight. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity. In some embodiments, the sensor is configured for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on a second growth module, wherein the second growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming system. In some embodiments, the sensor units contains a plurality of the sensors to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the growth modules that the environmental condition for any other growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one additional sensor measuring another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data, wherein the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data; further wherein the software module is configured for applying an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions, and wherein the software module is configured for generating instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the growth module in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved environmental growing conditions.
  • Provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system, the system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; a device that measures a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data; a sensor for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming growing chamber, wherein the sensor measures an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed and temperature, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the first crop growth module over time, the second environmental growing condition comprising a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution; and a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module configured to receive the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; a software module configured to apply an algorithm to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition and store the improved environmental growing condition in the memory; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the crop growth module to a sub-system of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing condition. In some embodiments, the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system, to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, a temperature of the controlled environment, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO2 and/or O2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is plant mass. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises a plurality of the sensors placed in a plurality of sensor units to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the crop growth modules that the environmental condition for any other crop growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one additional sensor that measures another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data, wherein the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; further wherein the software module is configured to apply an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions and store the improved environmental growing conditions in the memory, and wherein the software module is configured for generating and transmitting the instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the crop growth modules to a sub-system in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing conditions. In a second broad aspect provided herein is a sensor system for use in measuring two or more crop growing conditions in an environmentally controlled growth system comprising: a sensor unit configured for mounting in and/or to a first growth module within a vertical growth tower within the growth system, the growth module configured to: stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within the vertical growth tower; permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution to another growth module below itself within the tower, wherein the sensor unit is further configured to, when mounted in and/or to the first growth module: measure and collect input data corresponding to a first crop growing condition at a plant canopy level outside of the growth module, and measure and collect input data corresponding to at least a second crop growing condition, wherein the first crop growing condition is selected from the group comprising humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, and temperature, and wherein the second crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In some embodiments, the sensor unit comprises one or more of a first temperature sensor, a CO2 level sensor, and a humidity sensor. In some embodiments, the sensor system further comprises a data transmitter inside of a sensor unit housing for transmitting collected input data to a master box, wherein the master box collects, organizes and collates the received input data. In some embodiments, the sensor unit housing is water resistant, and one or more of the temperature sensor, the CO2 level sensor, and the humidity sensor are configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module. In some embodiments, the sensor unit further comprises: an environmental ambient air speed sensor; an air pressure sensor; a light spectrum sensor; or any combination thereof which are configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module. In some embodiments, the sensor unit further comprises at least one of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor, configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In some embodiments, the master box further comprises: a wireless receiver to receive transmitted input data from sensor units in the environmentally controlled growth system; a digital processing device comprising an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory; a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data from the plurality of sensor units and transmits the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system for a vertical farming system configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data; and a wireless transmitter to transmit the organized and collated input data to the automated control system. In some embodiments, the nutrient concentration sensor is adapted to measure, in the aqueous crop nutrient solution, an aqueous concentration of at least one of: zinc; molybdenum; manganese; iron; copper; chlorine; boron; sulfur; magnesium; calcium; potassium; phosphorus; and nitrogen.
  • Provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system, the system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; a device that measures a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data; a sensor for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming growing chamber, wherein the sensor measures an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed, air pressure and temperature of the controlled environment, further wherein a sensor unit nose placed on the sensor unit is not permeable to water, and is permeable to gases, permitting passage of gases therethrough and permits insulation of carbon dioxide or other gas sensors for use in wet conditions of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; and a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module configured to receive the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; a software module configured to apply an algorithm to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition and store the improved environmental growing condition in the memory; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the crop growth module to a sub-system of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing condition. In some embodiments, the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system, to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO2 and/or O2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; or a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the sensor for placement in the sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module further measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the second crop growth module over time. In some embodiments, the second environmental growing condition comprises a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In some embodiments, the environmental growing condition comprises: an air temperature inside the crop growth module; a humidity inside the crop growth module; an airflow inside the crop growth module; a temperature of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; a flow rate of the aqueous nutrient solution; an aqueous nutrient concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved O2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved CO2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity (EC) of the aqueous nutrient solution; or a nutrient composition of the aqueous nutrient solution. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • Provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber, the control system operating in the vertical farming growing chamber; a sensor unit configured for mounting in or on a first crop growth module of the vertical farming system, the first crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself, wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the first crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed and temperature, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the first crop growth module over time, the second environmental growing condition comprising a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution; a device that measures data corresponding to a crop characteristic of crops growing in the second crop growth module; a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module configured to receive the data corresponding to the first and second environmental growing conditions and the data corresponding to the crop characteristic from the environmental sensors and the measuring device; a software module configured to apply an algorithm to the data corresponding to the first and second environmental growing conditions and the data corresponding to the crop characteristic to generate improved first and second environmental growing conditions and store the improved first and second environmental growing conditions in the memory; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions for adjustment of the first and second environmental growing conditions to a sub-system in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved first and second environmental growing conditions. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises a software module configured to regulate at least one growing condition in response to instructions, the at least one growing condition selected from the group consisting of: a temperature; a humidity; a gaseous or an aqueous CO2 or and/or O2 content; an airflow speed; an air pressure; a flow rate of an aqueous nutrient solution to be supplied to crop plants growing in the crop growth modules; an aqueous nutrient concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) of the aqueous nutrient solution; an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) of the aqueous nutrient solution; a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light emitting source; and a movement of the at least first and second crop growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • In a third broad aspect provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least first and second stacked crop growth modules and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, the control system comprising: a sensor unit configured for mounting in or on the first growth module of the vertical farming system, the first growth module configured to stack with the second growth module below itself within the vertical farming system and permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution to the second growth module; the sensor unit configured for measuring data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, and temperature; the sensor unit further configured for measuring data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the first growth module over time, the second environmental growing condition a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution; a device measuring data corresponding to a crop characteristic of crops growing in the second growth module; a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module receiving the data corresponding to the first and second environmental growing conditions and the data corresponding to the crop characteristic; a software module applying an algorithm to the data corresponding to the first and second environmental growing conditions and the data corresponding to the crop characteristic to generate improved first and second environmental growing conditions; and a software module generating instructions for adjustment of the first and second environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved first and second environmental growing conditions. In some embodiments, the control system of further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate temperature; a software module configured to regulate humidity; a software module configured to regulate gaseous or aqueous CO2 or O2 content; a software module configured to regulate airflow; a software module configured to regulate air pressure; a software module configured to regulate flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit, in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants in an aqueous nutrient solution, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: temperature of the nutrient solution; pH of the nutrient solution; electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; air temperature in the controlled environment; humidity in the controlled environment; ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment; ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment; airflow in the controlled environment; nutrient solution flow rate; nutrient composition of the nutrient solution; temperature of the controlled environment light quality in the controlled environment; or light intensity in the controlled environment. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is a leaf area index of the crop plant and wherein the device comprises a digital imaging apparatus configured and positioned for measuring the leaf area index. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is plant weight. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity. In some embodiments, the sensor is configured for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on a second growth module, wherein the second growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming system. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises a plurality of the sensors placed in the sensor units to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the growth modules that the environmental condition for any other growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one additional sensor measuring another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data, wherein the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data; further wherein the software module is configured for applying an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions, and wherein the software module is configured for generating instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the growth module in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the improved environmental growing conditions. In some embodiments, the sensor unit further comprises one or more of a first temperature sensor, a CO2 level sensor, and a humidity sensor. In some embodiments, the sensor system further comprises a data transmitter inside of a sensor unit housing for transmitting collected input data to a master box, wherein the master box collects, organizes and collates the received input data. In some embodiments, the sensor unit housing is water resistant, and one or more of the temperature sensor, the CO2 level sensor, and the humidity sensor are configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module. In some embodiments, the sensor unit further comprises an environmental ambient air speed sensor; an air pressure sensor; a light spectrum sensor; or any combination thereof configured for placement outside of the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to crop growing conditions at the plant canopy level outside of the growth module. In some embodiments, the sensor unit further comprises at least one of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor, configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In some embodiments, the master box further comprises: a wireless receiver to receive transmitted input data from sensor units in the environmentally controlled growth system; a digital processing device comprising an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory; a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data from the plurality of sensor units and transmits the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system for a vertical farming system configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data; and a wireless transmitter to transmit the organized and collated input data to the automated control system. In some embodiments, the nutrient concentration sensor is adapted to measure, in the aqueous crop nutrient solution, an aqueous concentration of at least one of: zinc; molybdenum; manganese; iron; copper; chlorine; boron; sulfur; magnesium; calcium; potassium; phosphorus; and nitrogen.
  • In a fourth broad aspect, provided herein is a computer-implemented method for operating a control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, the method comprising: training a machine learning algorithm to identify a plurality of recommended environmental growing conditions for a crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system by providing historic environmental growing condition data and crop growth data; receiving real-time data from a plurality of sensors, each sensor measuring an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber; receiving real-time data from a device, the device measuring a crop characteristic of the crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system; and applying the trained machine learning algorithm to the real-time data from the plurality of sensors and the real-time data from the device to generate instructions for adjustment of each of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the recommended environmental growing conditions. In some embodiments, the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants in an aqueous nutrient solution, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: temperature of the nutrient solution, pH of the nutrient solution, electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, air temperature in the controlled environment, humidity in the controlled environment, ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, airflow in the controlled environment, nutrient solution flow rate, nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, temperature of the controlled environment light quality in the controlled environment, or light intensity in the controlled environment. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is a leaf area index of the crop plant and wherein the device comprises a digital imaging apparatus configured and positioned for measuring the leaf area index. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is plant weight. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity. In some embodiments, the sensors are configured for placement in one or more sensor units mounted in or on growth modules, wherein each growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules above and/or below itself within a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming system. In some embodiments, the sensors comprise one or more of a first temperature sensor, a CO2 level sensor, and a humidity sensor. In some embodiments, wherein the sensors comprise a nutrient concentration sensor adapted to measure, in an aqueous crop nutrient solution, an aqueous concentration of at least one of: zinc; molybdenum; manganese; iron; copper; chlorine; boron; sulfur; magnesium; calcium; potassium; phosphorus; and nitrogen. In some embodiments, the sensors in the one or more sensor units mounted in or on growth modules, provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the growth modules that the environmental condition for any other growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level.
  • Provided herein is a computer-implemented method for operating a control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber, the method comprising: training a machine learning algorithm to identify a plurality of recommended environmental growing conditions for a crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system by providing historic environmental growing condition data and crop growth data; receiving real-time data from a plurality of sensors, each sensor measuring an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; receiving real-time data from a device, the device measuring a crop characteristic of the crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system; and applying the trained machine learning algorithm to the real-time data from the plurality of sensors and the real-time data from the measuring device to generate instructions for adjustment of each of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to the recommended environmental growing conditions. In some embodiments, of the method, the vertical farming system is configured to supply water and nutrients to a crop of plants, through a nutrient supply system, in response to the environmental condition data measured by the sensor, in an aqueous nutrient solution, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, a temperature of the controlled environment, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE
  • All publications, patents, and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication, patent, or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings of which:
  • FIG. 1A is an illustrative isometric exterior view of a production farming facility comprising environmentally controlled growing chambers with multi-stage vertical growth systems therein.
  • FIG. 1B is an illustrative isometric exterior cut-away view of a production farming facility comprising environmentally controlled growing chambers with multi-stage vertical growth systems therein.
  • FIG. 2 is an illustrative isometric view of several multi-stage vertical growth systems within one of the environmentally controlled growing chambers.
  • FIG. 3 is another illustrative isometric view of one multi-stage vertical growth system.
  • FIG. 4 is a schematic of a vertical column structure illustrating possible spacing configurations of hydroponic plant growth modules and spacers depending on loading and unloading schemes, the growth cycle of the crop as it could relate to a loading/unloading scheme, the size of the plant in each hydroponic plant growth module and the weight of the growth modules.
  • FIG. 5A is a front view of side-by-side vertical columns with illustrative representations of stacked growth modules comprising at least one lateral growth opening.
  • FIG. 5B is a side view of a vertical column with illustrative representations of stacked growth modules comprising at least one lateral growth opening and intermittent spacer/sensor modules placed between the hydroponic plant growth modules in the vertical column in a different arrangement.
  • FIG. 6A is an illustrative top isometric, side and bottom isometric view of one of many possible configurations of a growth module, illustrating a V-baffle hinge connection, one of many possible hinge configurations.
  • FIG. 6B is an illustrative top view of a spacer/sensor module illustrating a T-baffle hinge connection on a vertical column, one of many possible hinge configurations.
  • FIG. 7A is another illustrative isometric view of one of many possible configurations of a growth module, illustrating a circular design with a plurality of lateral growth openings.
  • FIG. 7B is an illustrative example of a circular growth module configuration on a suspended circular vertical column with a counter-weight to provided added stability.
  • FIG. 7C is another illustrative top view of an alternative FIG. 12A configuration hydroponic plant growth module, illustrating a circular design comprising a plurality of hydroponic plant sub-module growth modules encased in a larger growth module housing.
  • FIG. 7D is illustrative example of a porous growth medium that may be placed into a growth module.
  • FIG. 8A is an illustrative isometric end view of an (optional) superiorly mounted conveyor system capable of moving the coupled vertical columns about a structural support circuit.
  • FIG. 8B is an illustrative side cross-section view of an (optional) superiorly mounted conveyor system capable of moving the coupled vertical columns about a structural support circuit.
  • FIG. 9 is an illustrative schematic of a gravity-feed water and nutrient supply system supporting the vertical farming system.
  • FIG. 10A is an illustrative schematic of the machine learning capability and system controls associated with the automated master control system.
  • FIG. 10B is an illustrative schematic of a control system configured for automatic and routine manual inputs of commands to control the environmental growing conditions of the growing chamber.
  • FIG. 10C is an illustrative schematic of a control system configured for full automated control of the environmental growing conditions of the growing chamber by an artificial intelligence-controlled software module, not requiring routine manual inputs.
  • FIG. 11A is an illustrative top view of a growth module configured for containing a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions.
  • FIG. 11B is an illustrative view of a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions.
  • FIG. 11C is an illustrative view of a growth module containing a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions.
  • FIG. 12A is an illustrative view of a device for placement over an opening of a growth module and having apertures therethrough allowing for one or more sensors to protrude therefrom.
  • FIG. 12B is an illustrative view of a growth module containing a sensor unit including sensors for sensing one or more environmental growing conditions, with a device for placement over an opening of the growth module and having apertures therethrough allowing for one or more sensors to protrude therefrom.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
  • Among those technology advancements is the application of new control systems 600 capable of machine learning, or artificial intelligence, capable of assimilating thousands or even millions of data points acquired by strategically placed sensors 615 during the course of a growing cycle or multiple growing cycles, and further capable of automatically adjusting the growth conditions 610 for a crop 20 on a year-round basis within the controlled environment such as lighting 108, fertilizers (nutrients), moisture, gas levels, temperature, air flow, and ultimately, packaging to produce higher yields at a lower cost per square foot, with reduced overall losses per planted crop, better nutritional value, visual appeal and faster growth cycles.
  • Combining advances in agriculture with the increasing technological advances of industry acquired since the industrial revolution and more recently, the concept of assembly line automation, the inventors herein have conceived a vertical farming structure 101 in a controlled environment 100, 1000, 1001 having columns comprising automated hydroponic plant growth modules 104, capable of being moved about an automated conveyance system 200(a/b) in a carousel fashion, exposed to controlled lighting 108, airflow provided by an airflow source 400 and humidity, with ideal nutritional support provided by a nutrient supply system 300.
  • As used herein, machine learning or artificial intelligence means intelligence exhibited by machines. In computer science, an ideal “intelligent” machine is a flexible rational agent that perceives its environment and takes actions that maximize its chance of success at some goal. Colloquially, the term “artificial intelligence” is applied when a machine mimics “cognitive” functions that humans associate with other human minds, such as “learning” and “problem solving”. As machines become increasingly capable, facilities once thought to require intelligence are removed from the definition. For example, optical character recognition is no longer perceived as an exemplar of “artificial intelligence” having become a routine technology. Capabilities still classified as AI include advanced Chess and Go systems and self-driving cars. The central problems (or goals) of AI research include reasoning, knowledge, planning, learning, natural language processing (communication), perception and the ability to move and manipulate objects. General intelligence is among the field's long-term goals. Approaches include statistical methods, computational intelligence, soft computing (e.g. machine learning), and traditional symbolic AI. Many tools are used in AI, including versions of search and mathematical optimization, logic, methods based on probability and economics. The AI field draws upon computer science, mathematics, psychology, linguistics, philosophy, neuroscience and artificial psychology.
  • The AI system herein comprises various sensors and circuit boards that optionally include a Raspberry Pi (a series of credit card-sized single-board computers) or Arduinos (an open-source prototyping platform) that either through wifi, radio frequency, wires, or other mechanism communicate to a server that can store data in the cloud, or a hard drive, or in a data historian. Humans may play some role in the form of gathering, analyzing, or manipulating this data.
  • With environmental data such as oxygen levels, humidity, temperature, light penetration, airflow etc. and data points on the crop cycle such as yield, taste, plant health, nutrient intake, etc., the learning possibilities are expanded significantly. Compounding this data within improved horticultural knowledge now makes it possible to attain up to approximately 33 crop cycles in a year per vertical carousel, versus one or two typical growing seasons in outdoor agriculture or approximately eight growing cycles in some greenhouse environments.
  • Those of skill will recognize that the various illustrative logical blocks, modules, circuits, and algorithm steps described in connection with the embodiments disclosed herein, including with reference to the control systems described herein, for example, may be implemented as electronic hardware, software stored on a computer readable medium and executable by a processor, or combinations of both. To clearly illustrate this interchangeability of hardware and software, various illustrative components, blocks, modules, circuits, and steps have been described above generally in terms of their functionality. Whether such functionality is implemented as hardware or software depends upon the particular application and design constraints imposed on the overall system. Skilled artisans may implement the described functionality in varying ways for each particular application, but such implementation decisions should not be interpreted as causing a departure from the scope of the present invention. For example, various illustrative logical blocks, modules, and circuits described in connection with the embodiments disclosed herein may be implemented or performed with a general purpose processor, a digital signal processor (DSP), an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), a field programmable gate array (FPGA) or other programmable logic device, discrete gate or transistor logic, discrete hardware components, or any combination thereof designed to perform the functions described herein. A general purpose processor may be a microprocessor, but in the alternative, the processor may be any conventional processor, controller, microcontroller, or state machine. A processor may also be implemented as a combination of computing devices, e.g., a combination of a DSP and a microprocessor, a Raspberry PI further comprising Arduinos, a plurality of microprocessors, one or more microprocessors in conjunction with a DSP core, or any other such configuration. Software associated with such modules may reside in RAM memory, flash memory, ROM memory, EPROM memory, EEPROM memory, registers, a hard disk, a removable disk, a CD-ROM, or any other suitable form of storage medium known in the art. An exemplary storage medium is coupled to the processor such the processor can read information from, and write information to, the storage medium. In the alternative, the storage medium may be integral to the processor. The processor and the storage medium may reside in an ASIC. For example, in one embodiment, a controller for use of control of the IVT comprises a processor (not shown).
  • Certain Definitions
  • Unless otherwise defined, all technical terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. As used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Any reference to “or” herein is intended to encompass “and/or” unless otherwise stated.
  • Digital Processing Device
  • In some embodiments, the Automated Control System and or the Master Control System for the multi-stage, automated growth system described herein includes a digital processing device, or use of the same. In further embodiments, the digital processing device includes one or more hardware central processing units (CPU) that carry out the device's functions. In still further embodiments, the digital processing device further comprises an operating system configured to perform executable instructions. In some embodiments, the digital processing device is optionally connected a computer network. In further embodiments, the digital processing device is optionally connected to the Internet such that it accesses the World Wide Web. In still further embodiments, the digital processing device is optionally connected to a cloud computing infrastructure. In other embodiments, the digital processing device is optionally connected to an intranet. In other embodiments, the digital processing device is optionally connected to a data storage device.
  • In accordance with the description herein, suitable digital processing devices include, by way of non-limiting examples, server computers, desktop computers, laptop computers, notebook computers, sub-notebook computers, netbook computers, netpad computers, set-top computers, media streaming devices, handheld computers, Internet appliances, mobile smartphones, tablet computers, personal digital assistants, video game consoles, and vehicles. Those of skill in the art will recognize that many smartphones are suitable for use in the system described herein. Those of skill in the art will also recognize that select televisions, video players, and digital music players with optional computer network connectivity are suitable for use in the system described herein. Suitable tablet computers include those with booklet, slate, and convertible configurations, known to those of skill in the art.
  • In some embodiments, the digital processing device includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions. The operating system is, for example, software, including programs and data, which manages the device's hardware and provides services for execution of applications. Those of skill in the art will recognize that suitable server operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD®, Linux, Apple® Mac OS X Server®, Oracle® Solaris®, Windows Server®, and Novell® NetWare®. Those of skill in the art will recognize that suitable personal computer operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Microsoft® Windows®, Apple® Mac OS X®, UNIX®, and UNIX-like operating systems such as GNU/Linux®. In some embodiments, the operating system is provided by cloud computing. Those of skill in the art will also recognize that suitable mobile smart phone operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Nokia® Symbian® OS, Apple® iOS®, Research In Motion® BlackBerry OS®, Google® Android®, Microsoft® Windows Phone® OS, Microsoft® Windows Mobile® OS, Linux®, and Palm® WebOS®. Those of skill in the art will also recognize that suitable media streaming device operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Apple TV®, Roku®, Boxee®, Google TV®, Google Chromecast®, Amazon Fire®, and Samsung® HomeSync®. Those of skill in the art will also recognize that suitable video game console operating systems include, by way of non-limiting examples, Sony® PS3®, Sony® PS4®, Microsoft® Xbox 360®, Microsoft Xbox One, Nintendo® Wii®, Nintendo® Wii U®, and Ouya®.
  • In some embodiments, the device includes a storage and/or memory device. The storage and/or memory device is one or more physical apparatuses used to store data or programs on a temporary or permanent basis. In some embodiments, the device is volatile memory and requires power to maintain stored information. In some embodiments, the device is non-volatile memory and retains stored information when the digital processing device is not powered. In further embodiments, the non-volatile memory comprises flash memory. In some embodiments, the non-volatile memory comprises dynamic random-access memory (DRAM). In some embodiments, the non-volatile memory comprises ferroelectric random access memory (FRAM). In some embodiments, the non-volatile memory comprises phase-change random access memory (PRAM). In other embodiments, the device is a storage device including, by way of non-limiting examples, CD-ROMs, DVDs, flash memory devices, magnetic disk drives, magnetic tapes drives, optical disk drives, and cloud computing based storage. In further embodiments, the storage and/or memory device is a combination of devices such as those disclosed herein.
  • In some embodiments, the digital processing device includes a display to send visual information to a user. In some embodiments, the display is a cathode ray tube (CRT). In some embodiments, the display is a liquid crystal display (LCD). In further embodiments, the display is a thin film transistor liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD). In some embodiments, the display is an organic light emitting diode (OLED) display. In various further embodiments, on OLED display is a passive-matrix OLED (PMOLED) or active-matrix OLED (AMOLED) display. In some embodiments, the display is a plasma display. In other embodiments, the display is a video projector. In still further embodiments, the display is a combination of devices such as those disclosed herein.
  • In some embodiments, the digital processing device includes an input device to receive information from a user. In some embodiments, the input device is a keyboard. In some embodiments, the input device is a pointing device including, by way of non-limiting examples, a mouse, trackball, track pad, joystick, game controller, or stylus. In some embodiments, the input device is a touch screen or a multi-touch screen. In other embodiments, the input device is a microphone to capture voice or other sound input. In other embodiments, the input device is a video camera or other sensor to capture motion or visual input. In further embodiments, the input device is a Kinect, Leap Motion, or the like. In still further embodiments, the input device is a combination of devices such as those disclosed herein.
  • Non-Transitory Computer Readable Storage Medium
  • In some embodiments, the Automated Control System and or the Master Control System for the multi-stage, automated growth system disclosed herein includes one or more non-transitory computer readable storage media encoded with a program including instructions executable by the operating system of an optionally networked digital processing device. In further embodiments, a computer readable storage medium is a tangible component of a digital processing device. In still further embodiments, a computer readable storage medium is optionally removable from a digital processing device. In some embodiments, a computer readable storage medium includes, by way of non-limiting examples, CD-ROMs, DVDs, flash memory devices, solid state memory, magnetic disk drives, magnetic tape drives, optical disk drives, cloud computing systems and services, and the like. In some cases, the program and instructions are permanently, substantially permanently, semi-permanently, or non-transitorily encoded on the media.
  • Computer Program
  • In some embodiments, the Automated Control System and or the Master Control System for the multi-stage, automated growth system disclosed herein includes at least one computer program, or use of the same. A computer program includes a sequence of instructions, executable in the digital processing device's CPU, written to perform a specified task. Computer readable instructions may be implemented as program modules, such as functions, objects, Application Programming Interfaces (APIs), data structures, and the like, that perform particular tasks or implement particular abstract data types. In light of the disclosure provided herein, those of skill in the art will recognize that a computer program may be written in various versions of various languages.
  • The functionality of the computer readable instructions may be combined or distributed as desired in various environments. In some embodiments, a computer program comprises one sequence of instructions. In some embodiments, a computer program comprises a plurality of sequences of instructions. In some embodiments, a computer program is provided from one location. In other embodiments, a computer program is provided from a plurality of locations. In various embodiments, a computer program includes one or more software modules. In various embodiments, a computer program includes, in part or in whole, one or more web applications, one or more mobile applications, one or more standalone applications, one or more web browser plug-ins, extensions, add-ins, or add-ons, or combinations thereof.
  • As used herein, and unless otherwise specified, the term “about” or “approximately” means an acceptable error for a particular value as determined by one of ordinary skill in the art, which depends in part on how the value is measured or determined. In certain embodiments, the term “about” or “approximately” means within 1, 2, 3, or 4 standard deviations. In certain embodiments, the term “about” or “approximately” means within 30%, 25%, 20%, 15%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, 0.5%, 0.1%, or 0.05% of a given value or range. In certain embodiments, the term “about” or “approximately” means within 40.0 mm, 30.0 mm, 20.0 mm, 10.0 mm 5.0 mm 1.0 mm, 0.9 mm, 0.8 mm, 0.7 mm, 0.6 mm, 0.5 mm, 0.4 mm, 0.3 mm, 0.2 mm or 0.1 mm of a given value or range. In certain embodiments, the term “about” or “approximately” means within 20.0 degrees, 15.0 degrees, 10.0 degrees, 9.0 degrees, 8.0 degrees, 7.0 degrees, 6.0 degrees, 5.0 degrees, 4.0 degrees, 3.0 degrees, 2.0 degrees, 1.0 degrees, 0.9 degrees, 0.8 degrees, 0.7 degrees, 0.6 degrees, 0.5 degrees, 0.4 degrees, 0.3 degrees, 0.2 degrees, 0.1 degrees, 0.09 degrees. 0.08 degrees, 0.07 degrees, 0.06 degrees, 0.05 degrees, 0.04 degrees, 0.03 degrees, 0.02 degrees or 0.01 degrees of a given value or range.
  • As used herein, the terms “connected”, “operationally connected”, “coupled”, “operationally coupled”, “operationally linked”, “operably connected”, “operably coupled”, “operably linked,” and like terms, refer to a relationship (mechanical, linkage, coupling, etc.) between elements whereby operation of one element results in a corresponding, following, or simultaneous operation or actuation of a second element. It is noted that in using said terms to describe inventive embodiments, specific structures or mechanisms that link or couple the elements are typically described. However, unless otherwise specifically stated, when one of said terms is used, the term indicates that the actual linkage or coupling may take a variety of forms, which in certain instances will be readily apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the relevant technology.
  • For description purposes, the term “radial” is used here to indicate a direction or position that is perpendicular relative to a longitudinal axis.
  • The term “axial” as used here refers to a direction or position along an axis that is parallel to a main or longitudinal axis. For clarity and conciseness, at times similar components labeled similarly (for example, axis 1011A and axis 1011B) will be referred to collectively by a single label (for example, axis 1011).
  • As used herein, and unless otherwise specified, the term “anterior” means the front surface of an apparatus or structure; often used to indicate the position of one structure relative to another, that is, situated nearer the front part of an apparatus or structure.
  • As used herein, and unless otherwise specified, the term “posterior” means the back surface of an apparatus or structure; Often used to indicate the position of one structure relative to another, that is, nearer the back of an apparatus or structure.
  • As used herein, and unless otherwise specified, the term “superior” refers to an apparatus or structure and means situated above or nearer the vertex of the head in relation to a specific reference point; opposite of inferior. It may also mean situated above or directed upward.
  • As used herein, and unless otherwise specified, the term “inferior” refers to an apparatus or structure and means situated nearer the soles of the feet in relation to a specific reference point; opposite of superior. It may also mean situated below or directed downward.
  • As used herein, and unless otherwise specified, the term “lateral” means denoting a position farther from the median plane or midline of an apparatus or a structure. It may also mean “pertaining to a side”.
  • As used herein and unless otherwise specified, the term “medial” means, situated toward the median plane or midline of an apparatus or structure.
  • As used herein, the terms “comprises”, “comprising”, or any other variation thereof, are intended to cover a nonexclusive inclusion, such that a process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises a list of elements does not include only those elements but may include other elements not expressly listed or inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus.
  • As used herein, the term “vertical growth assembly” means a tower assembly comprising a plurality of growth modules, or alternately means a vertical column or vertical growth column comprising a plurality of growth modules. The tower assembly comprises either a supported tower or an unsupported, self-standing tower. The vertical column typically comprises a vertical support member having a plurality of growth modules affixed thereto. The vertical support member may affix to an outer edge of a growth module container or through an interior portion thereof.
  • As used herein, “light intensity” refers to or photosynthetically active radiation [PAR] or photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD). PPFD is a measured metric whereas PAR is a descriptive term for a range of wavelengths.
  • Control and Sensor Systems of the Present Disclosure
  • In a first broad aspect, provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system 1000, 1001. The vertical farming system includes a plurality of vertical growth systems 101 in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber 100, for example a greenhouse. FIGS. 1A and 1B depict external and cut-away views of exemplary facilities with growing chambers for use with control systems of the present disclosure. The control system includes a sensor or group of sensors 615, which measures one or more environmental growing conditions 610 in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber over time to generate corresponding environmental condition data 645. The sensor(s) 615 is, for example, an air temperature sensor, a humidity sensor, or a sensor for measuring gaseous carbon dioxide content. The sensor(s) may also sense numerous other environmental conditions, including air pressure, air flow, gaseous oxygen content, light quality (e.g.: spectral properties of natural or artificial light), and/or light quantity (e.g.: light intensity or length of light/dark cycles). Alternatively or additionally, the sensor(s) may measure one or more properties of an aqueous nutrient solution which may be provided to crops growing in the vertical farming system, for example in a hydroponic vertical farming system. These properties may include temperature, dissolved oxygen and/or carbon dioxide content, nutrient content (e.g.: content of one or more of zinc, molybdenum, manganese, iron, copper, chlorine, boron, sulfur, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen), pH, oxygen reduction potential, or electrical conductivity. In addition or alternatively, the sensor may also sense a rate of movement of growing plants, for example as such plants are moved up or down a vertical growth tower, and/or around a growing circuit in the vertical farming system. In some systems, the sensor may be part of a sensor array 30, suitable for measuring any combination of environmental growing conditions 610, including any possible combination of the conditions described in this paragraph. An exemplary sensor is depicted at FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B, adapted for placement in the plant growth module, spacer module or sensor module 104/105/110 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B.
  • As depicted in FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B, the sensor system comprises a sensor module 110, a sensor circuit board 31, a sensor mounting port 32, a sensor battery pack 33, a sensor nose mount 34, a sensor nose 35, a sensor circuit mounting board 37 configurable for mounting a sensor 615 (not shown) or a crop characteristic measuring device 625 (not shown) and a digital imaging device/crop characteristic device mounting port 38.
  • The sensor and/or sensor array measures the environmental growing condition(s) continually, or at intervals during the growing cycle of the crop plant grown in the vertical farming system. The environmental growing condition data generated by the sensor or sensor array may, for example, provide a “fingerprint” corresponding to one or more environmental conditions experienced by a growing crop plant over time over the course of its growth, for example up until the time of harvest. Alternatively, the data may correspond with only two or more time points during the course of the plant's growth cycle.
  • In some embodiments, the sub-system is selected from the group consisting of: a lighting control sub-system (not shown); a HVAC control sub-system (not shown); a nutrient supply control sub-system (not shown); a conveyance control sub-system (not shown); and a vertical lift mechanism control sub-system (not shown).
  • The vertical farming system also includes one or more devices 625 for measuring a quantifiable crop characteristic of a crop grown in the growth module, to generate corresponding crop growth data 645. The device may be a digital imaging device, such as a digital camera, suitable for capturing images of growing crop plants which may be used for generating measurements of leaf area index (LAI). The device may also be for measuring the weight, sugar content, water content, acidity, or other properties of the crop plant. The device(s) may generate crop characteristic data corresponding with any one or more of the measured quantifiable crop characteristic(s). The device may be positionable within the vertical farming system such that it may measure the quantifiable characteristic during plant growth, and/or after harvest. For example, a digital imaging apparatus may be stationary, and positioned such that it captures digital images of crop plants as they pass by while travelling around a growth circuit. Alternatively, the apparatus may be mounted to a drone which flies about the vertical farming system capturing images of growing plants.
  • As illustrated in FIGS. 10A-10C, the vertical farming system control system 600 also includes a processing device 635, which includes a processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module 665 configured for receiving the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor or sensor array 615, 30 and the measuring device 625; a software module configured to apply an algorithm 655 to the environmental growing condition data 610 and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions 671/672/674 for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the hydroponic plant growth module to a sub-system 675/685 of the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing condition.
  • The processing device may also include a receiver, for receiving transmitted data, and/or a transmitter, for transmitting data. The receiver and transmitter (not shown) may be configured for wired, and/or wireless receipt or transmission of data. The computer program includes instructions which may be executed by the processing device to create an application. The application includes a software module 665, which is configured to receive environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). It also includes a software module that applies an algorithm 655 to the environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and to the crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). By application of the algorithm, one or more improved environmental growing condition(s) are generated. The processing device also includes a software module that generates instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition(s) in or around the crop growth module to the improved environmental growing condition.
  • In a simple and non-limiting example, the algorithm may be applied to data corresponding with a particular air temperature over the course of a crop's growing cycle, which represents an increase over a previous measured air temperature, and data corresponding to the crop's leaf area index, which represents an increase over the leaf area index of a crop grown under the previously measured air temperature conditions. In such a case, the newly measured temperature would represent an improved environmental growing condition. The software module would then generate instructions for adjusting the temperature in or around the crop growing module. The temperature could then be adjusted, either automatically, or with human intervention. Some control systems may be configured to automatically monitor and adjust the growing condition(s) in response to the instructions.
  • In other examples, the measured crop characteristic may represent a decrease in leaf area index, and instructions would be generated for adjusting the temperature back to the previously measured temperature, corresponding with a larger leaf area index. In some examples, a plurality of two, three, or four or more environmental conditions would be measured over time during the crop cycle, and application of the algorithm to data corresponding with this combination of measured environmental conditions would generate improved growing conditions for each of the measured conditions. For example, instructions for adjustment to improved levels of any combination of air temperature, humidity, gaseous carbon dioxide, and/or any combination of characteristics of an aqueous nutrient solution may be generated.
  • The control system may include one or more software modules configured for regulating one or more of temperature, humidity, gaseous or aqueous CO2 or O2 content, airflow, air pressure, flow of water and nutrients, aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution, aqueous pH, water or aqueous oxidation reduction potential (ORP), aqueous electrical conductivity (EC), a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source, and movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • In some embodiments, as illustrated in FIG. 10A, the computer control system or master control system 600, comprises: an input variable server 620, a Fog Node 630, a SCADA interface 640 to provide instantaneous automatic control 650, Cloud Servers 660, Graphical Displays 670, the ability to accommodate and provide Real Time Queries 680 and software systems providing Deep Learning, Artificial Intelligence programming 690. When properly programed and combined the master control system 600 monitors growth conditions 610 of the enclosed production farming facility 1000, 1001, the growth chambers 100 and individual hydroponic plant growth modules 104 in each vertical growth system 101, analyzing the input data from the monitored growth conditions 610 provided by the sensors 615 and crop characteristic measuring devices 625, sent to the senor arrays 30 and subsequently transmitted to the master control system 600 for processing. Once this data is collected and analyzed, the master control system 600 is configured, through Deep Learning, Artificial Intelligence programming 690, to adjust growth conditions by sending out new instructions 671, 672, 674 to the various environmental control systems 675, 685 and nutrient control systems 300 in order to improve and continually optimize the output characteristics 695 of the crop.
  • In some embodiments of the plant growing systems the output characteristics 695 of the crop comprise nutrition levels, weight, growth (manufacturing/production) costs, color or appearance, flavor and/or texture.
  • The sensor(s) may be configured for placement in a sensor unit 110, which itself is configurable for placement in a separate growth module 104 or a sensor module 105, which may or may not include a growing plant therein. This second “dummy” growth module 105, to (and/or inside of) which the sensor is mounted, may be configured to stackably support other growth modules above or below itself within a vertical growth tower, all within the vertical growth system.
  • In some examples, numerous sensors are distributed about the environmentally-controlled growing chamber 100 to provide environmental data 610 corresponding with their individual positions. In some examples, sensors 615 are distributed about one or more vertical growth towers, each corresponding with a position of a growth module within the growth tower. In preferred examples, a sufficient number of sensors is used such that environmental data (corresponding with one or more environmental condition(s) generated by this plurality of sensors such that the environmental condition(s) at any position within the tower (or within the system) may be predicted with 95% statistical confidence.
  • Provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system, the system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules 104 in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber 100; a device that measures a crop characteristic 625 of a crop 20 grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data 645; a sensor 615 for placement in a sensor unit 110 mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower 102 in the vertical farming growing chamber 100, wherein the sensor 615, 30 measures an environmental growing condition 610 in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber 100 over time to generate environmental condition data 645, further wherein the sensor unit 110 measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition 610 selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed and temperature, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the first crop growth module over time, the second environmental growing condition 610 comprising a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. One of skill in the art will appreciate that the control system and the sensors are calibrated such that data from either the first or the second environmental condition, collected from either the first or second growth module is considered to be representative of either the first or second environmental condition. The control system further comprises a processing device 635 comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module 655 configured to receive the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; a software module configured to apply an algorithm 655 to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition and store the improved environmental growing condition in the memory; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the crop growth module to a sub-system of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing condition. In some embodiments, the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system 300, to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, a pH of the nutrient solution, an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a nutrient composition of the nutrient solution, a temperature of the controlled environment, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment.
  • In some embodiments, the nutrient supply system 300, such as the non-limiting system illustrated in FIG. 9, is configured to direct the aqueous crop nutrient solution from a master water reservoir 310, pumped up to the tops of the vertical growth columns via a pump and piping system 320, and distributed through the upper opening of the hydroponic plant growth module when mounted to the vertical growth column 102, in a controlled flow, allowing the water and nutrients 305 to percolate through the hydroponic plant growth modules located on each vertical growth column. Optionally, additional distribution points at lower points along the vertical column may also be utilized for secondary distribution of water with balanced nutrient levels to account for losses and absorption in the hydroponic plant growth modules above. Once the water and nutrients 305 complete the vertical traverse, the remaining water and nutrients that leave the lowest hydroponic plant growth module is collected in a pan 330, recycled to the master water reservoir 330 where the nutrient levels are automatically analyzed and again replenished to optimal levels before repeating the cycle.
  • In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO2 and/or O2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; and a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is plant mass. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is sugar content. In some embodiments, the crop characteristic is acidity. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises a plurality of the sensors placed in a plurality of sensor units to provide environmental condition data corresponding with a sufficient quantity of the crop growth modules that the environmental condition for any other crop growth module in the system is predictable based on the provided data at a 95% confidence level. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one additional sensor that measures another environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate additional environmental condition data, wherein the software module is configured for receiving the additional environmental condition data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; further wherein the software module is configured to apply an algorithm to the environmental condition data, the additional environmental data, and the crop growth data to generate improved environmental growing conditions and store the improved environmental growing conditions in the memory, and wherein the software module is configured for generating and transmitting the instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing conditions in or around the crop growth modules to a sub-system in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing conditions.
  • Provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farming system, the system comprising: at least first and second crop growth modules in an environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; a device that measures a crop characteristic of a crop grown in the first crop growth module of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to generate crop growth data; a sensor for placement in a sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module, the second crop growth module configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution through or over itself and being configured to stackably support one or more other crop growth modules above and/or below itself, thereby forming a vertical growth tower in the vertical farming growing chamber, wherein the sensor measures an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber over time to generate environmental condition data, further wherein the sensor unit measures data corresponding to a first environmental growing condition at a plant canopy level outside the second crop growth module over time, the first environmental growing condition selected from the group consisting of humidity, ambient carbon dioxide concentration, ambient oxygen concentration, airflow speed, air pressure and temperature of the controlled environment, further wherein a sensor unit nose placed on the sensor unit is not permeable to water, and is permeable to gases, permitting passage of gases therethrough and permits insulation of carbon dioxide or other gas sensors for use in wet conditions of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber; and a processing device comprising at least one processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program including instructions executable by the processing device to create an application comprising: a software module configured to receive the environmental condition data and the crop growth data from the environmental sensor and the measuring device; a software module configured to apply an algorithm to the environmental condition data and the crop growth data to generate an improved environmental growing condition and store the improved environmental growing condition in the memory; and a software module configured to generate and transmit instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition in or around the crop growth module to a sub-system of the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber to implement the improved environmental growing condition. In some embodiments, the vertical farming system is configured to supply the aqueous nutrient solution, through a nutrient supply system, to plants growing in crop growth modules stacked in the vertical growth tower, and wherein the environmental growing condition comprises: a temperature of the nutrient solution, an air temperature in the controlled environment, a humidity in the controlled environment, an ambient oxygen gas concentration in the controlled environment, an ambient carbon dioxide concentration in the controlled environment, an airflow in the controlled environment, a nutrient solution flow rate, a light quality in the controlled environment, or a light intensity in the controlled environment. In some embodiments, the control system further comprises at least one of: a software module configured to regulate a temperature; a software module configured to regulate a humidity; a software module configured to regulate a gaseous or an aqueous CO2 and/or O2 content; a software module configured to regulate an airflow; a software module configured to regulate an air pressure; a software module configured to regulate a flow of water and nutrients; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution; a software module configured to regulate an aqueous pH; a software module configured to regulate a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP); a software module configured to regulate an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC); a software module configured to regulate a quality or a quantity of a light emission from a light source; or a software module configured to regulate a movement of the first crop growth modules around a growing circuit; in response to the instructions. In some embodiments, the sensor for placement in the sensor unit mounted in or on the second crop growth module further measures data corresponding to a second environmental growing condition inside the second crop growth module over time. In some embodiments, the second environmental growing condition comprises a characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In some embodiments, the environmental growing condition comprises: an air temperature inside the crop growth module; a humidity inside the crop growth module; an airflow inside the crop growth module; a temperature of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity of the nutrient solution; a flow rate of the aqueous nutrient solution; an aqueous nutrient concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a pH of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved O2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a dissolved CO2 concentration of the aqueous nutrient solution; a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) of the aqueous nutrient solution; an electrical conductivity (EC) of the aqueous nutrient solution; or a nutrient composition of the aqueous nutrient solution. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a receiver for receiving transmitted data. In some embodiments, the processing device further comprises a transmitter for transmitting data. In some embodiments, the receiver and transmitter are configured for wired or wireless receipt or transmission of data. In some embodiments, the control system is further configured to automatically monitor and adjust one or more of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled vertical farming growing chamber in response to the instructions.
  • In a second broad aspect, further provided herein is a sensor system 30 for use in measuring two or more crop growing conditions in an environmentally-controlled growth system, for example a greenhouse. FIGS. 1A and 1B depict external views of exemplary growing chambers for use with control systems of the present disclosure. The sensor system includes a sensor unit 110, which is configured to be mounted in, or on, a growth module in a vertical growth tower within the growth system. The growth module is configured to stackably support one or more other growth modules, above and/or below itself in the vertical growth tower. The growth module is also configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution, for example a solution typically used in hydroponic agriculture, to another growth module below itself within the tower. For example, the growth module may have an aperture that allows for flow of the solution through the module, or it may permit the solution to flow around and/or over itself, down toward a module below. The module may itself be configured appropriately to contain a growing crop plant. The module may have a lateral growth opening allowing for a growing plant to grow laterally from the module, with roots housed in the module. Alternatively, the module may be a “dummy” module, which is representative of other growth modules in terms of stackability and permission of nutrient solution vertical flow, but is not itself configured to contain a growing plant.
  • The sensor unit 110 is configured to, when mounted in, to and/or on the growth module, measure and collect input data. The input data corresponds with a crop growing condition outside of the growth module at a plant canopy level. The plant canopy level corresponds with the area where either a) a growing plant canopy exists (the plant growing out of an opening 106 in the growth module 104), orb) the region in space corresponding with where a growing plant's canopy would be, if the growth module did contain a growing plant. An exemplary sensor is depicted at FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B adapted for placement in the growth module 104 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B.
  • By way of non-limiting example, in cases where plant growth modules in the vertical growth tower are adapted to house a growing lettuce plant, an area adjacent to each growth module will correspond with an area of plant canopy for each growing lettuce plant. The area may be, for example, adjacent to a lateral growth opening 106 in the growth module 104. The area may occupy approximately the area of one growing lettuce (or other plant species, as appropriate) plant. The area may occupy a region in space comprising, for example, about a 3″ 6″, 9″, 12″, 15″, 18″, 21″, or 24″ layer adjacent to the growth module. In any case, the sensor unit 110 is configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with a first crop growing condition at the plant canopy level, outside of the growth module.
  • As would now be obvious to one skilled in the art, spacer modules 105 could be stacked above, below and between sensor modules 110, and hydroponic plant growth modules 104 to create adequate growth areas and under-canopy spacing between growing plants during the growth cycle. Additionally, the intra-growth module space could be increased during the growth cycle, as needed to accommodate extra growth and to optimize logistical spacing in the growth column during the growth cycle. By way of non-limiting example, in cases where hydroponic plant growth modules in the vertical growth tower are adapted to house a growing plant that ultimately requires additional spacing between hydroponic plant growth modules during the growth cycle, FIGS. 4 and 5B illustrate where spacer modules 105 (and/or sensor modules 110) are configured to be placed in single or multiple layers between hydroponic plant growth modules. The placement of these additional modules can occur at any time in the growth cycle, in the initial seeding stages, or during the middle or later growth stages, using either manual or automated loading and conveyor systems as will be described hereinafter.
  • Still further, in some embodiments the hydroponic plant growth modules 104 and spacer modules 105 are configured with expandable wall height means 25, as illustrated in FIGS. 6A and 7B. The expandable hydroponic plant growth modules provide additional means to generate alternate, non-standard module heights to accommodate larger plant crops and achieve a logistically preferable spacing between hydroponic plant growth modules.
  • At least one growing condition 610 measured at the plant canopy level is temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide, and the sensor unit may accordingly comprise a temperature sensor, a carbon dioxide sensor, and/or a humidity sensor or hygrometer. Monitoring each of these growing conditions at the plant canopy level is thought to be important for measuring the likely health of a growing crop plant. The sensor unit may also comprise one or more of an ambient air speed sensor, an air pressure sensor, or a sensor for measuring light quality or quantity, at the plant canopy level.
  • The sensor unit is also configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with at least one other, or “second” crop growing condition. The “second” crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution provided by the nutrient supply system 300. In the vertical farming system, nutrients and water are supplied to the growing plants (housed within the growth modules, themselves stacked within the vertical growth towers) in an aqueous crop nutrient solution. Such crop nutrient solutions possess numerous measurable and quantifiable characteristics, one or more of which may be measured by the sensor. For example, the sensor unit may include one or more of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor. Such sensors may be configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In examples where the sensor unit includes a nutrient concentration sensor, this sensor may be configured to sense concentration, in the nutrient solution, of one or more of zinc, molybdenum, manganese, iron, copper, chlorine, boron, sulfur, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen.
  • In some examples, the sensor system also includes a transmitter (not shown), which is configured for transmitting (wirelessly and/or by wire) collected input data to a master box, which collects, organizes, and collates the received data. The master box may include a wireless receiver (not shown), for receiving the transmitted input data from the sensor units. It may also include a digital processing device 635, which includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory. It may also include a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data, and to transmit the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system. The control system 600 may be configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions 610 in the environmentally controlled growth environment 100 in response to the input data. The master box may itself also include a transmitter, for transmission of the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • In some examples, the sensor unit is waterproof or water resistant. The sensor system comprises a sensor module 110, a sensor circuit board 31, a sensor mounting port 32, a sensor battery pack 33, a sensor nose mount 34, a sensor nose 35, a sensor circuit mounting board 37, configurable for mounting a sensor 615 (not shown) or a crop characteristic measuring device 625 (not shown) and a digital imaging device/crop characteristic device mounting port 38. With reference to FIGS. 12A and 12B, the sensor unit includes a waterproof “nose” 35 configured for placement over an opening of a growth module 24, which may be made of plastic or some other suitable material, the nose including one, two, three or more apertures 32, 38. In some embodiments, the “nose” is not permeable to water, but is permeable to gases, thus permitting for passage of gases therethrough and not liquids, further permitting insulation of carbon dioxide or other gas sensors for use in an environment frequently exposed to wet conditions. Protruding from the apertures in the “nose” may be one or more sensors 615, for sensing one or more environmental conditions at a plant canopy level, for example, temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide content. In some examples, the sensor(s) for sensing the “first” crop growing condition at a plant canopy level are in functional communication, either wirelessly or by wire, with the sensor(s) for sensing the “second” crop growing condition of the nutrient solution. The sensor unit may be adapted to fit within a plant growth unit 104, through or around which nutrient solution flows during plant growth. In such examples, the sensor unit may include one or more sensors for sensing the “second” crop growth condition (of the nutrient solution) inside the growth unit, while also including one or more sensors protruding from a growth opening in the growth unit, positioned in space corresponding with where a growing plant canopy would be, and sensing the “first” growth condition at the plant canopy level.
  • It should be appreciated that the sensor nose mount 34 and the sensor nose 35 provide a water-tight seal to the sensor module 110, wherein the (at least) moisture resistant sensors 615 (not shown) inserted in the sensor mounting port 32 and/or the (at least) moisture resistant crop characteristic measuring device 625 (not shown) inserted in the digital imaging device/crop characteristic device mounting port 38 are capable of obtaining environmental and crop characteristic data while keeping moisture and other environmental factors out of the sensor module which could potentially affect longevity of the module, the sensors, the crop characteristic measuring device, the sensor circuit board 31, and the sensor circuit mounting board 37 or the integrity of the data measured. It should also be appreciated that a transmitter (not shown) embedded within the sensor module is capable of transmitting the measured data to a master control system 600 associated with the computer-implemented control system for the vertical farm system.
  • In a third broad aspect, provided herein is a computer-implemented control system for a vertical farm system. The control system includes at least two (a “first” and a “second”) stacked crop growth modules, the system for operation in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, for example a greenhouse. FIGS. 1A and 1B depict external views of exemplary growing chambers for use with control systems of the present disclosure.
  • The control system includes at least one sensor unit. An exemplary sensor is depicted in FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B, adapted for placement in the plant growth module, spacer module or sensor module 104/105/110 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B. The sensor unit is configured to be mounted in, or on, the “first” growth module, which itself is configured to stack with the “second” growth module in a vertical growth tower within the growth system. The “first” growth module is also configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution, for example a solution typically used in hydroponic agriculture, to another growth module below itself within the tower. For example, the growth module may have an aperture that allows for flow of the solution through the module, or it may permit the solution to flow around and/or over itself, down toward a module below. The module may itself be configured appropriately to contain a growing crop plant. The module may have a lateral growth opening allowing for a growing plant to grow laterally from the module, with roots housed in the module. Alternatively, the module may be a “dummy” module, which is representative of other growth modules in terms of stackability and permission of nutrient solution vertical flow, but is not itself configured to contain a growing plant.
  • The sensor unit is configured to, when mounted in, to and/or on the “first” growth module, measure and collect input data. The input data corresponds with a crop growing condition outside of the growth module at a plant canopy level. The plant canopy level corresponds with the area where either a) a growing plant canopy exists (the plant growing out of an opening in the growth module), or b) the region in space corresponding with where a growing plant's canopy would be, if the growth module did contain a growing plant.
  • By way of non-limiting example, in cases where plant growth modules in the vertical growth tower are adapted to house a growing lettuce plant, an area adjacent to each growth module will correspond with an area of plant canopy for each growing lettuce plant. The area may be, for example, adjacent to a lateral growth opening in the growth module. The area may occupy approximately the area of one growing lettuce (or other plant species, as appropriate) plant. The area may occupy a region in space comprising, for example, about a 3″ 6″, 9″, 12″, 15″, 18″, 21″, or 24″ layer adjacent to the growth module. In any case, the sensor unit is configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with a first crop growing condition at the plant canopy level, outside of the “first” growth module.
  • At least one growing condition measured at the plant canopy level is temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide, and the sensor unit may accordingly comprise a temperature sensor, a carbon dioxide sensor, and/or a humidity sensor or hygrometer. Monitoring each of these growing conditions at the plant canopy level is thought to be important for measuring the likely health of a growing crop plant. The sensor unit may also comprise one or more of an ambient air speed sensor, an air pressure sensor, or a sensor for measuring light quality or quantity, at the plant canopy level.
  • The sensor unit is also configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with at least one other, or “second” crop growing condition. The “second” crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In the vertical farming system, nutrients and water are supplied to the growing plants (housed within the growth modules, themselves stacked within the vertical growth towers) in an aqueous crop nutrient solution. Such crop nutrient solutions possess numerous measurable and quantifiable characteristics, one or more of which may be measured by the sensor. For example, the sensor unit may include one or more of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor. Such sensors may be configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In examples where the sensor unit includes a nutrient concentration sensor, this sensor may be configured to sense concentration, in the nutrient solution, of one or more of zinc, molybdenum, manganese, iron, copper, chlorine, boron, sulfur, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen.
  • In some examples, the sensor system also includes a transmitter, which is configured for transmitting (wirelessly and/or by wire) collected input data to a master box, which collects, organizes, and collates the received data. The master box may include a wireless receiver, for receiving the transmitted input data from the sensor units. It may also include a digital processing device, which includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory. It may also include a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data, and to transmit the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system. The control system may be configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data. The master box may itself also include a transmitter, for transmission of the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • In some examples, the sensor unit is waterproof or water resistant. With reference to FIGS. 12A and 12B, the sensor unit includes a waterproof “nose”, which may be made of plastic or some other suitable material, the nose including one, two, three or more apertures. Protruding from the apertures in the “nose” are one or more sensors, for sensing one or more environmental conditions at a plant canopy level, for example, temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide content. In some examples, the sensor(s) for sensing the “first” crop growing condition at a plant canopy level are in functional communication, either wirelessly or by wire, with the sensor(s) for sensing the “second” crop growing condition of the nutrient solution. The sensor unit may be adapted to fit within a plant growth unit, through which nutrient solution flows during plant growth. In such examples, the sensor unit may include one or more sensors for sensing the “second” crop growth condition (of the nutrient solution) inside the growth unit, while also including one or more sensors protruding from a growth opening in the growth unit, positioned in space corresponding with where a growing plant canopy would be, and sensing the “first” growth condition at the plant canopy level.
  • The sensor may measure the environmental growing condition(s) continually, or at intervals during the growing cycle of the crop plant grown in the vertical farming system. The environmental growing condition data generated by the sensor may, for example, provide a “fingerprint” corresponding to one or more environmental conditions experienced by a growing crop plant over time over the course of its growth, for example up until the time of harvest. Alternatively, the data may correspond with only two or more time points during the course of the plant's growth cycle.
  • The vertical farming system also includes a device for measuring a quantifiable crop characteristic of a crop grown in the growth module, to generate corresponding crop growth data. The device may be a digital imaging device, such as a digital camera, suitable for capturing images of growing crop plants which may be used for generating measurements of leaf area index (LAI). The device may also be for measuring the weight, sugar content, water content, acidity, or other properties of the crop plant. It may generate crop characteristic data corresponding with any one or more of the measured quantifiable crop characteristic(s). The device may be positionable within the vertical farming system such that it may measure the quantifiable characteristic during plant growth, and/or after harvest. For example, a digital imaging apparatus may be stationary, and positioned such that it captures digital images of crop plants as they pass by while travelling around a growth circuit. Alternatively, the apparatus may be mounted to a drone which flies about the vertical farming system capturing images of growing plants.
  • The vertical farming system also includes a processing device, which includes a processor, a memory, an operating system configured to perform executable instructions, and a computer program. The processing device may also include a receiver, for receiving transmitted data, and/or a transmitter, for transmitting data. The receiver and transmitter may be configured for wired, and/or wireless receipt or transmission of data. The computer program includes instructions which may be executed by the processing device to create an application. The application includes a software module, which is configured to receive environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). It also includes a software module that applies an algorithm to the environmental condition data generated by the sensor(s), and to the crop characteristic data generated by the device(s). By application of the algorithm, one or more improved environmental growing condition(s) are generated. The processing device also includes a software module that generates instructions for adjustment of the environmental growing condition(s) in or around the crop growth module to the improved environmental growing condition.
  • In a simple and non-limiting example, the algorithm may be applied to data corresponding with a particular air temperature over the course of a crop's growing cycle, which represents an increase over a previous measured air temperature, and data corresponding to the crop's leaf area index, which represents an increase over the leaf area index of a crop grown under the previously measured air temperature conditions. In such a case, the newly measured temperature would represent an improved environmental growing condition. The software module would then generate instructions for adjusting the temperature in or around the crop growing module. The temperature could then be adjusted, either automatically, or with human intervention. Some control systems may be configured to automatically monitor and adjust the growing condition(s) in response to the instructions.
  • In other examples, the measured crop characteristic may represent a decrease in leaf area index, and instructions would be generated for adjusting the temperature back to the previously measured temperature, corresponding with a larger leaf area index. In some examples, a plurality of two, three, or four or more environmental conditions would be measured over time during the crop cycle, and application of the algorithm to data corresponding with this combination of measured environmental conditions would generate improved growing conditions for each of the measured conditions. For example, instructions for adjustment to improved levels of any combination of air temperature, humidity, gaseous carbon dioxide, and/or any combination of characteristics of an aqueous nutrient solution may be generated.
  • The control system may include one or more software modules configured for regulating one or more of temperature, humidity, gaseous or aqueous CO2 or O2 content, airflow, air pressure, flow of water and nutrients, aqueous nutrient concentration of an aqueous nutrient solution, aqueous pH, water or aqueous oxidation reduction potential (ORP), aqueous electrical conductivity (EC), a quality or a quantity of light emission from a light source, and movement of plant growth modules around a growing circuit.
  • In some examples, numerous sensors are distributed about the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to provide environmental data corresponding with their individual positions. In some examples, sensors are distributed about one or more vertical growth tower, each corresponding with a position of a growth module within the growth tower. In preferred examples, a sufficient number of sensors is used such that environmental data (corresponding with one or more environmental condition(s) generated by this plurality of sensors such that the environmental condition(s) at any position within the tower (or within the system) may be predicted with 95% statistical confidence.
  • In a fourth broad aspect, provided herein is a computer-implemented method for operating a control system for a vertical farming system comprising at least a first crop growth module and operating in an environmentally-controlled growing chamber. The method includes training a machine learning algorithm to identify a plurality of recommended environmental growing conditions for a crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system by providing historic environmental growing condition data and crop growth data. The method includes the following steps:
      • receiving real-time data from a plurality of sensors, each sensor measuring an environmental growing condition in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber;
      • receiving real-time data from a device, the device measuring a crop characteristic of the crop growing in the crop growth module of the vertical farming system; and
      • applying the trained machine learning algorithm to the real-time data from the plurality of sensors and the real-time data from the device to generate instructions for adjustment of each of the environmental growing conditions in the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to the recommended environmental growing conditions.
  • The sensors may be configured to be mounted in, or on, a “first” growth module, which itself is configured to stack with a “second” growth module in a vertical growth tower within the growth system. An exemplary sensor is depicted in FIGS. 11A, 11B, 11C, 12A and 12B, adapted for placement in the plant growth module, spacer module or sensor module 104/105/110 depicted in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B. The “first” growth module is configured to permit vertical flow of an aqueous crop nutrient solution, for example a solution typically used in hydroponic agriculture, to another growth module below itself within the tower. For example, the growth module may have an aperture that allows for flow of the solution through the module, or it may permit the solution to flow around and/or over itself, down toward a module below. The module may itself be configured appropriately to contain a growing crop plant. The module may have a lateral growth opening allowing for a growing plant to grow laterally from the module, with roots housed in the module. Alternatively, the module may be a “dummy” module, which is representative of other growth modules in terms of stackability and permission of nutrient solution vertical flow, but is not itself configured to contain a growing plant.
  • The sensor may be configured to, when mounted in, to and/or on the “first” growth module, measure and collect input data. The input data corresponds with a crop growing condition outside of the growth module at a plant canopy level. The plant canopy level corresponds with the area where either a) a growing plant canopy exists (the plant growing out of an opening in the growth module), or b) the region in space corresponding with where a growing plant's canopy would be, if the growth module did contain a growing plant.
  • By way of non-limiting example, in cases where plant growth modules in the vertical growth tower are adapted to house a growing lettuce plant, an area adjacent to each growth module will correspond with an area of plant canopy for each growing lettuce plant. The area may be, for example, adjacent to a lateral growth opening in the growth module. The area may occupy approximately the area of one growing lettuce (or other plant species, as appropriate) plant. The area may occupy a region in space comprising, for example, about a 3″ 6″, 9″, 12″, 15″, 18″, 21″, or 24″ layer adjacent to the growth module. In any case, the sensor unit is configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with a first crop growing condition at the plant canopy level, outside of the “first” growth module.
  • At least one growing condition measured at the plant canopy level may be temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide, and the sensor unit may accordingly comprise a temperature sensor, a carbon dioxide sensor, and/or a humidity sensor or hygrometer. Monitoring each of these growing conditions at the plant canopy level is thought to be important for measuring the likely health of a growing crop plant. The sensor unit may also comprise one or more of an ambient air speed sensor, an air pressure sensor, or a sensor for measuring light quality or quantity, at the plant canopy level.
  • The sensor may also configured to measure and collect input data corresponding with at least one other, or “second” crop growing condition. The “second” crop growing condition is a measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In the vertical farming system, nutrients and water are supplied to the growing plants (housed within the growth modules, themselves stacked within the vertical growth towers) in an aqueous crop nutrient solution. Such crop nutrient solutions possess numerous measurable and quantifiable characteristics, one or more of which may be measured by the sensor. For example, the sensor unit may include one or more of a nutrient concentration sensor, an aqueous pH sensor, an aqueous electrical conductivity (EC) sensor, an aqueous dissolved O2 concentration sensor, an aqueous dissolved CO2 concentration sensor, a water oxidation reduction potential (ORP) sensor, a water temperature sensor, and a water flow rate sensor. Such sensors may be configured for placement in or on the growth module and positioned to measure and collect input data corresponding to the measured characteristic of the aqueous crop nutrient solution. In examples where the sensor unit includes a nutrient concentration sensor, this sensor may be configured to sense concentration, in the nutrient solution, of one or more of zinc, molybdenum, manganese, iron, copper, chlorine, boron, sulfur, magnesium, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen.
  • In some examples, the sensor may be incorporated within a system which also includes a transmitter, which is configured for transmitting (wirelessly and/or by wire) collected input data to a master box, which collects, organizes, and collates the received data. The master box may include a wireless receiver, for receiving the transmitted input data from the sensor units. It may also include a digital processing device, which includes an operating system configured to perform executable instructions and a memory. It may also include a computer program including instructions executable by the digital processing device configured to collect, organize and collate the input data, and to transmit the organized and collated input data to a computer-implemented automated control system. The control system may be configured to monitor, analyze and adjust one or more crop growing conditions in the environmentally controlled growth environment in response to the input data. The master box may itself also include a transmitter, for transmission of the organized and collated input data to the automated control system.
  • In some examples, the sensor unit is waterproof or water resistant. With reference to FIG. 12A and FIG. 12B, the sensor unit includes a waterproof “nose”, which may be made of plastic or some other suitable material, the nose including one, two, three or more apertures. Protruding from the apertures in the “nose” are one or more sensors, for sensing one or more environmental conditions at a plant canopy level, for example, temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide content. In some examples, the sensor(s) for sensing the “first” crop growing condition at a plant canopy level are in functional communication, either wirelessly or by wire, with the sensor(s) for sensing the “second” crop growing condition of the nutrient solution. The sensor unit may be adapted to fit within a plant growth unit, through which nutrient solution flows during plant growth. In such examples, the sensor unit may include one or more sensors for sensing the “second” crop growth condition (of the nutrient solution) inside the growth unit, while also including one or more sensors protruding from a growth opening in the growth unit, positioned in space corresponding with where a growing plant canopy would be, and sensing the “first” growth condition at the plant canopy level.
  • The sensor may measure the environmental growing condition(s) continually, or at intervals during the growing cycle of the crop plant grown in the vertical farming system. The environmental growing condition data generated by the sensor may, for example, provide a “fingerprint” corresponding to one or more environmental conditions experienced by a growing crop plant over time over the course of its growth, for example up until the time of harvest. Alternatively, the data may correspond with only two or more time points during the course of the plant's growth cycle.
  • Devices for use with methods of the present disclosure may be configured for measuring a quantifiable crop characteristic of a crop grown in the growth module, to generate corresponding crop growth data. The device may be a digital imaging device, such as a digital camera, suitable for capturing images of growing crop plants which may be used for generating measurements of leaf area index (LAI). The device may also be for measuring the weight, sugar content, water content, acidity, or other properties of the crop plant. It may generate crop characteristic data corresponding with any one or more of the measured quantifiable crop characteristic(s). The device may be positionable within the vertical farming system such that it may measure the quantifiable characteristic during plant growth, and/or after harvest. For example, a digital imaging apparatus may be stationary, and positioned such that it captures digital images of crop plants as they pass by while travelling around a growth circuit. Alternatively, the apparatus may be mounted to a drone which flies about the vertical farming system capturing images of growing plants.
  • In a simple and non-limiting example, the algorithm may be applied to data corresponding with a particular air temperature over the course of a crop's growing cycle, which represents an increase over a previous measured air temperature, and data corresponding to the crop's leaf area index, which represents an increase over the leaf area index of a crop grown under the previously measured air temperature conditions. In such a case, the newly measured temperature would represent an improved environmental growing condition. The software module would then generate instructions for adjusting the temperature in or around the crop growing module. The temperature could then be adjusted, either automatically, or with human intervention. Some control systems may be configured to automatically monitor and adjust the growing condition(s) in response to the instructions.
  • In other examples, the measured crop characteristic may represent a decrease in leaf area index, and instructions would be generated for adjusting the temperature back to the previously measured temperature, corresponding with a larger leaf area index. In some examples, a plurality of two, three, or four or more environmental conditions would be measured over time during the crop cycle, and application of the algorithm to data corresponding with this combination of measured environmental conditions would generate improved growing conditions for each of the measured conditions. For example, instructions for adjustment to improved levels of any combination of air temperature, humidity, gaseous carbon dioxide, and/or any combination of characteristics of an aqueous nutrient solution may be generated.
  • In some examples of the provided methods, numerous sensors are distributed about the environmentally-controlled growing chamber to provide environmental data corresponding with their individual positions. In some examples, sensors are distributed about one or more vertical growth tower, each corresponding with a position of a growth module within the growth tower. In preferred examples, a sufficient number of sensors is used such that environmental data (corresponding with one or more environmental condition(s) generated by this plurality of sensors such that the environmental condition(s) at any position within the tower (or within the system) may be predicted with 95% statistical confidence.
  • Exemplary Vertical Growth Towers and Growth Modules Suitable for Use in or with the Control and Sensor Systems of the Present Disclosure
  • As detailed above, control systems of the present disclosure may comprise growth modules stackable in vertical growth towers. Further, sensor systems of the present disclosure may be include sensors suitable for mounting in, or, or to such stackable growth modules. Vertical growth towers of the present disclosure may include: a plurality of growth modules, each growth module comprising: an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant; a drain aperture in the enclosure; and at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the enclosure; wherein one or more of the growth modules is configured to stackably support one or more of the other growth modules above and/or below itself within the tower, wherein the drain aperture is configured to facilitate vertical flow of fluids between growth modules within the tower, and wherein said lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module.
  • As shown in FIG. 4, a vertical growth tower 102, or simply a “tower”, is illustrated with a plurality of growth modules 104 stacked vertically, one on top of another. Each growth module 104 may be placed directly on top of the prior growth module, or spaced apart, with or without a “spacer” 105 between each growth module, depending on the stage of the growth cycle. Spacers, when used, are optionally configured with holes 13 to allow for passage of airflow and moisture between vertically-spaced growth modules. Each module is configured as an enclosure with at least one lateral growth opening 106, configured to permit and encourage growth of a plant laterally, away from the growth module. The plant growth module 104 is configured for: containing and supporting hydroponic plant growth media, for containing and supporting a root structure of at least one crop plant 20 growing therein; the at least one crop plant being of a gravitropic plant species, wherein the plants roots grow generally in the direction of gravitational pull (i.e., downward) and stems grow generally in the opposite direction (i.e., upwards). Additionally, the utilization of the lateral growth opening and resulting lateral growth of a plant provides an opportunity for better circulation of airflow from a variety of directions, to better disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of a plant, thus minimizing stagnant moisture accumulation and the potential for undesired biologic growth (i.e.: fungus, etc.).
  • An enclosure stack utilized in a particular tower or columnar growth structure is configured from a plethora of potential shapes, but generally speaking, all growth modules within a particular tower or columnar growth structure would ideally be the same shape. Alternatively, it is also conceived that the enclosures could have different shapes for the containment component of the growth module, but be configured with identical mounting components on the top and/or bottom that would allow for stacking of different shaped growth modules.
  • In some embodiments, the plurality of growth modules is an unsupported, self-standing tower.
  • As further illustrated in FIG. 4, a vertical growth tower is configured to stand as an unsupported, self-standing tower. This is possible due to the construction of the containment shape of the growth module. The containment shape is configurable to allow for the growth modules to potentially snap, press-fit, or otherwise snugly adhere to one another in a vertical fashion, providing stability to the structure
  • In some embodiments of the tower, a growth module is configured to provide a containment shape comprising: a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a square shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; a geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • As noted above, there are a variety of potential shapes that the enclosures could have, resulting in towers or vertical growth structures of similar vertical shape. There are a virtually limitless number of potential containment shapes that can be utilized.
  • Referring to FIGS. 6A through 6C, 7A through 7C, three such configurations are illustrated. FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate a growth module having a containment shape that is representative of a rectangular shape or a square shape; whereas FIG. 7A illustrates a growth module having a containment shape that is representative of a completely circular shape; and FIG. 7C illustrates a composite growth module assembly having an assembly and containment shape that is representative of any number of shapes, depending on how they are described, including a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; a geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • In some embodiments of the tower, at least one of the growth modules has an adjustable height to accommodate growth of the at least one plant. Still further, in some embodiments the hydroponic plant growth modules 104 and spacer modules 105 are configured with expandable wall height means 25, as illustrated in FIGS. 6A and 7B.
  • Referring back to FIG. 4, it can now be appreciated that the growth modules are alternately configured to have adjustable sizing. This is desirable for a number of reasons and possible in a number of ways. At any given time during a plant growth cycle, it is desirable to provide more space between plants as they mature. By providing expandable growth modules, the space between stacked modules is easily accomplished without the need to transplant the plant to a new, larger/taller module.
  • When addressing the expandable nature of a growth module, the inventors have conceived a growth module with telescoping side walls that provide added space between stacked growth modules. The telescoping walls can come in at least two configurations; wherein a number of sliding, telescoping panels affixed to the outside of the containment shape, are movably and lockably adjusted to telescope up or down on the outside of the containment shape, providing additional air gap space between adjacent modules without changing the internal containment shape holding the growth medium and the plant. Alternatively, the telescoping walls can be integral to the containment shape, so that when the top and bottom of the containment walls of the growth module are pulled in opposite directions, the internal volume and external height of height of the growth module increases, providing a larger gap between the lateral openings of adjacent growth modules.
  • In some embodiments, the tower further comprises at least a partial lower surface connected to the containment shape. In some embodiments, the drain aperture is positioned in or near the at least partial lower surface. In some embodiments, the at least partial lower surface optionally comprises a non-perpendicular surface relative to the containment shape, configured to facilitate the movement of fluids toward the drain aperture.
  • As further illustrated in FIG. 6A, 7A or 7-C, the growth module containment shape is variable and allows for many scenarios for the optimization of plant growth and size. FIG. 6A illustrates a growth module with 3 complete sides and an incomplete, but connected fourth side with a lateral growth opening, a partially open upper surface and a partially open lower surface. The lateral growth opening may alternately be a hole of any shape in any complete and/or connected side of the containment shape. The partial lower surface provides for a drain aperture to facilitate vertical movement of fluids and nutrients from an upper growth module to a lower growth module. In the event of a solid or complete lower surface in the growth module, at least one drain hole would be provided. Additionally, the lower surface is optionally configured to have a slope that would encourage gravitational flow of the fluids and nutrients towards the drain aperture.
  • In some embodiments, the tower further comprises at least a partial upper surface connected to the containment shape. In some embodiments of the unsupported, self-standing tower, each growth module is orientable in a different direction from at least one other growth module within the tower.
  • Referring back to FIGS. 5C and 6A, it is apparent that some embodiments of the growth modules comprising the tower are alternately configured to have either open upper surfaces or partially open upper surfaces to, either of which are configurable to support stacking. As noted previously, the growth modules are configured to promote stacking, such that the at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure of each module can be oriented in the same direction or an alternate direction to the growth module above or below it, simply be rotating the enclosure and securing the symmetric attachment features of the growth modules to the one above or below it.
  • Alternatively, FIG. 7A illustrates a circular growth module with multiple lateral growth openings in the containment shape. As with any of the other containment shapes, the illustrated growth module is stackable. The stackable assembly is possible with or without a central or support column. In the absence of a central column, a central hole would/could provide a conduit for airflow, additional fluid flow or nutrient supply conduits, for example. The illustrated module comprises both an upper and lower surface, and further comprises multiple apertures in both the top and bottom (not shown) surfaces to facilitate gravitational flow of the fluids and nutrients and vertical drainage to another growth module below.
  • Still further, FIG. 7C illustrates a top view of another circular growth module configuration on an optional circular vertical column, comprising a stackable sleeve configured to hold multiple growth modules. As with FIG. 7A, this module illustrates just one possible arrangement of multiple lateral growth openings in the containment shape. As described previously, the stackable sleeve assembly is possible with or without a central support column. In the absence of a central column, a central hole would/could provide a conduit for airflow, additional fluid flow or nutrient supply conduits, for example. As shown, a sleeve is configured with multiple slots or cut away sections configured to hold internally-captured growth modules, or alternately, sub-modules. Such a configuration makes it possible to optimize space on the column during the early growth cycle following germination, where a plant requires less space. At a later time, the internally-captured growth modules, or alternately, sub-modules, would be removed and either the plants therein would be transplanted to larger modules, or the modules themselves would simply be moved to a straight vertically-stacked column.
  • Alternatively, the inventors have also conceived of similar sleeved or compartmented module designs, mimicking the variety of containment shapes described previously for growth modules. In any one of these sleeved or compartmented growth module designs, the growth module is configured to hold a plurality of internally-captured growth modules or alternately, sub-modules. The internally-captured modules can be a standard or alternate shape, larger, the same or smaller in size than a regular production version of a growth module configured to accommodate a plant size at maturity.
  • It would be obvious to one skilled in the art that the size of any growth module is not limited. Growth modules can all be of a common size or be scaled larger or smaller as needed to accommodate the need. For example, newly germinated plants could be placed in a small, starter modules (of any shape), and placed in a sleeved containment module. Or newly germinated plants could be placed in a standard module (of any shape), and placed in a much larger sleeved containment module. Further still, newly germinated plants could be placed in small, starter modules (of any shape), and placed directly into a tower or vertical growth assembly, then later, transplanted into larger growth modules, if needed and replaced in the vertical growth assembly. Or alternately, the newly germinated plants could be placed in a standard module (of any shape), and placed directly into a tower or vertical growth assembly where it will remain for the entire growth cycle
  • In some embodiments, a top end of the unsupported, self-standing tower 102 is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying growth modules toward or away from the tower. In some embodiments of the unsupported, self-standing tower, a bottom end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying growth modules toward or away from the tower.
  • In some embodiments, a top end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a support structure 103 capable of supporting a plurality other unsupported, self-standing towers 102. In some embodiments, the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured to rotate about its vertical axis when attached to the support structure for similarly exposing the attached enclosures to a light source and/or an airflow.
  • In some embodiments of the unsupported, self-standing tower, the conveyance system provides a controlled, timed movement of each unsupported, self-standing tower, in unison with the other unsupported, self-standing towers attached to the conveyance system, to move a plant contained within the plurality of enclosures from a starting point location corresponding with an immature growth stage to a finishing point corresponding with a harvestable plant along a circuit within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, for example as depicted in FIGS. 2 and 3.
  • Referring now to FIG. 8A, one notes that the inventors have considered the inclusion of a conveyance system to facilitate the movement of the vertical growth assembly to provide for a regular cyclic rotation of crops from a germination stage to a harvest stage. As shown in the figure, one potential configuration of the conveyance system is attached to a vertical support structure as shown in FIG. 3, and connects to the vertical growth assembly at the top. The conveyance system is configured to move a plurality of tower or columnar assemblies about a circuit within the environmentally controlled growing chamber, for example as depicted in FIGS. 2 and 3.
  • The conveyance system can be a vertically driven 200(a), a bottom driven conveyance system (not shown), or combination of both. As shown in the non-limiting illustrations herein, the top-mounted conveyance components 200(a) comprise rollers 202, guiderails 203 mounted to the support structure 103, and vertical column hangers 204 for mounting directly to the vertical column 102. The hangers 204 are configurable to allow the vertical columns 104 to hang freely, if unsupported at the bottom, or to spin, if desired, as noted above.
  • In addition, or alternatively, the conveyance system is configured to connect to the bottom of the vertical growth assembly. The conveyance system on the bottom of the vertical growth assembly may be the same or different in configuration with the top conveyance system. For example, the bottom conveyance system is optionally configured to be a conveyor belt system, such as one used in airport luggage handling systems. This system is specifically designed to allow for turning the vertical growth assembly around the turns in a circuit, and optionally also provides the ability to rotate the entire vertical growth assembly about its central axis. Additionally, as shown if FIG. 8B, the conveyance system is alternately equipable with a hanger system capable of providing suspension of the vertical growth assembly.
  • In some embodiments, the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 50.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 40.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 30.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 25.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 20.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 19.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 18.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 17.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 16.0 feet tall; or approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 15.0 feet tall.
  • As noted previously, the environmentally controlled vertical farming system is specifically designed to take greenhouse-like farming to a massive scale. As such, it is now obvious to one reading this application that the scale and size of the vertical growth structures, the towers and/or vertical growth column is only limited by the size and height of the facility holding the environmentally controlled vertical farming system and the capacity of the stacked growth modules, vertical growth columns, support structures and optional conveyance systems to support their collective weights. In any given embodiment, the unsupported, self-standing tower is conceivably between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 100.0 feet tall, or more. In other more common production environments embodiments, the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall, where facilities permit. In smaller scale embodiments the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and anywhere between approximately 15.0 feet to approximately 50.0 feet tall, as available facilities for these sizes are more common.
  • Provided herein is a vertical column for a vertical farming system configured for detachable attachment to at least one growth module, the vertical column comprising a periphery having: a square shape; a rectangular shape; a generally circular shape; a partially circular shape; triangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; any geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof; wherein the growth module comprises: a sleeve configured to hold a plurality of sub-growth modules; a housing configured to hold a plurality of sub-growth modules, each sub-growth module comprising an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant; a drain aperture in the growth module; and at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure and/or at least one sub-growth module configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the growth module; wherein the growth module is configured to stackably support a plurality of other growth modules stacked above and/or below itself, wherein the drain aperture is configured to facilitate vertical flow of fluids from the growth module to another growth module stacked below itself, and wherein said lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module. In some embodiments, the vertical column comprises an at least partially hollow interior.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column further comprising at least one attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to the growth module. In some embodiments, the at least one attachment mechanism comprises: a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof.
  • In some embodiments, the at least one attachment mechanism is on a longitudinal surface of said vertical column. In some embodiments, the at least one attachment mechanism is on a longitudinal surface of said vertical column. In some embodiments, the at least one growth module is attached in a radial pattern about the periphery of the vertical column.
  • In addition to the concept of vertical growth, unsupported, free-standing towers, the inventors have developed vertical columns comprising growth modules affixed thereto. The vertical column comprises a vertical internal or external support column. The support column can have a variety of peripheral shapes comprising a square shape; a rectangular shape; a generally circular shape; a partially circular shape; triangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; any geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof, and is preferably at least partially hollow on the interior, but not required to be. Modules slide over, or onto the support column is some embodiments. In other embodiments, they attach to an attachment mechanism such as a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof.
  • FIGS. 5A through 5C, illustrate the concept of a “T”-rail or a “V”-rail on the vertical column for fixing the growth modules.
  • In some embodiments, alternatively, and/or in addition, the growth module further comprises a corresponding attachment mechanism such as a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof to facilitate attachment to the vertical column.
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate the concept of a corresponding “T”-rail or a “V”-rail on the growth modules for fixing the m to the vertical support column.
  • In any one of these configurations, one of skill in the art would recognize that the attachment mechanisms could be placed on any longitudinal surface of the column, allowing for radial placement of the non-circular growth modules circumferentially around the vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, the growth module of any one of the previously described configurations, the growth modules are detachably attachable to a vertical column with an external device comprising; a ring; a clamp; a collar; a bar collar; a quick-release clamp; a hose-type clamp; a magnet; a thru-pin; a cotter pin; a detachably attachable container affixed to the vertical column and configured to contain the growth module therein; or any combination thereof; wherein the detachably attachable container is configured to allow a stand-alone growth module to be slidably removed from the vertical column while leaving the detachably attachable container affixed to the vertical column.
  • In some embodiments the attachment mechanism is configured for placement either: between the growth module and column, adjacent to the growth module and column, or attached to both the vertical column and the growth module in order to provide both fixation and separated spacing of the growth modules along the vertical height of the column, such as: a ring; a clamp; a collar; a bar collar; a quick-release clamp; a hose-type clamp; a magnet; a thru-pin; a cotter pin; a detachably attachable container affixed to the vertical column and configured to contain the growth module therein; or any combination thereof. FIG. 5C illustrates the use of an external clamp used to augment the fixation between the vertical column and the growth module. In a similar fashion, a collar; a bar collar; a quick-release clamp; a hose-type clamp; a cotter pin; a magnetic ring or a through-hole and retaining pin are utilized to provide spacing between modules along the column.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying the growth module to and/or away from the vertical column. In some embodiments, the vertical column configured for attachment to the conveyance system at a bottom end and/or a top end of the vertical column.
  • Just as with the tower configuration described previously, the vertical column configurations are configured for attachment to a conveyance system, with or without an auxiliary support structure, as illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 8A.
  • In some embodiments, a top end of the vertical column is configured for attachment to a support structure capable of supporting a plurality other vertical columns.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column is configured to rotate about its vertical axis when attached to the support structure for uniformly exposing the attached growth modules to a light source and/or an airflow during each rotation.
  • In even further embodiments the vertical column is configured to hang from a support structure that allows the vertical column to rotate about its axis. Additionally, with at least one configuration it is shown that the growth module is able to spin about the column, even as the column spins. In still other embodiments, the vertical column is configured to rotate as a rotating pendulum, as illustrated in FIG. 7B, where suspended weights are utilized to balance the column and add inertia to the mass.
  • An additional benefit of any such rotating column or tower is the idea of self-induced airflow wherein a plant extending from a lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module. When a column or tower is configured to rotate, either by means of a conveyance system or as a suspended, rotating pendulum, airflow is induced around and through the extended under-canopy of the plant, which in turn will disrupt the boundary of the plants under-canopy.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 50.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 40.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 30.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 25.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 20.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 19.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 18.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 17.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 16.0 feet tall; or approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 15.0 feet tall.
  • As with the previously discussed tower configurations, vertical growth column height is only limited by the size and height of the facility holding the environmentally controlled vertical farming system and the capacity of the stacked growth modules, vertical growth columns, support structures and optional conveyance systems to support their collective weights. In any given embodiment, the vertical growth column is conceivably between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 100.0 feet tall, or more. In other more common production environment embodiments, the vertical growth column is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall, where facilities permit. In smaller scale embodiments the unsupported, self-standing tower is between: approximately 10.0 feet and anywhere between approximately 20.0 feet to approximately 50.0 feet tall, as available facilities for these sizes are more common.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column is configured to provide at least one of: a forced airflow conduit; and a gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit; wherein the forced airflow conduit and the gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit are optionally, within the interior of the vertical column, or on the exterior of the vertical column, with ports accessible to and from an attached growth module of any shape.
  • As noted previously, a potentially preferred embodiment of the vertical growth column is at least partially hollow on the interior, but not required to be. In this embodiment, a forced airflow conduit and a water nutrient conduit are configured to optimally provide a steady, gravity-fed supply of air, water and nutrients to attached growth modules via selective ports located along the column. This has a number of advantages. First, it provides the ability to keep excessive tubing out of the way of the growth modules for loading and unloading operations. Second, it allows for the easy delivery of air, water and nutrients to any module located at any position along the length of the vertical column. Third, in the case of water and nutrients, it allows for supplemental delivery of nutrient rich water to plants further down the column which has not had any of the original concentration of nutrients diluted before delivery to the lower sections of the column.
  • In some embodiments of the vertical column, the conveyance system provides a controlled, timed movement of each unsupported, self-standing tower, in unison with the other unsupported, self-standing towers attached to the conveyance system, to move a plant contained within the plurality of enclosures from a starting point location corresponding with an immature growth stage to a finishing point corresponding with a harvestable plant along a circuit within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber, for example as depicted in FIGS. 2 and 3.
  • Again as noted with the towers, the inventors have considered the inclusion of a conveyance system to facilitate the movement of the vertical growth assembly to provide for a regular cyclic rotation of crops from a germination stage to a harvest stage. As shown in the figure, one potential configuration of the conveyance system is attached to a vertical support structure as shown in FIG. 3, and connects to the vertical growth assembly at the top. The conveyance system is configured to move a plurality of tower or columnar assemblies about a circuit within the environmentally controlled growing chamber.
  • In addition, or alternatively, the conveyance system is configured to connect to the bottom of the vertical growth assembly. The conveyance system on the bottom of the vertical growth assembly may be the same or different in configuration with the top conveyance system. For example, the bottom conveyance system is optionally configured to be a conveyor belt system, such as one used in airport luggage handling systems. This system is specifically designed to allow for turning the vertical growth assembly around the turns in a circuit, and optionally also provides the ability to rotate the entire vertical growth assembly about its central axis. Additionally, as shown if FIG. 8B, the conveyance system is alternately equipable with a hanger system capable of providing suspension of the vertical growth assembly
  • In some embodiments, the column is configured to adapt to an adjustment in height of at least one of the growth modules so as to accommodate growth of the at least one plant.
  • Growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include: an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant; a drain aperture in the enclosure; and at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the growth module; wherein the growth module is configured to support a plurality of growth modules stacked above and/or below itself, wherein the drain aperture is configured to facilitate vertical flow of fluids from the growth module to another growth module stacked below itself, and wherein said lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module.
  • In some embodiments, the enclosure is configured to provide a containment shape comprising: a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a square shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; a geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • In some embodiments, the growth module further comprises at least a partial lower surface connected to the containment shape.
  • In some embodiments, the drain aperture is positioned in or near the at least partial lower surface.
  • In some embodiments, the at least partial lower surface optionally comprises a non-perpendicular surface relative to the containment shape, configured to facilitate the movement of fluids toward the drain aperture.
  • In some embodiments, the growth module further comprises at least a partial upper surface connected to the containment shape.
  • In some embodiments, the plurality of stacked growth modules is an unsupported, self-standing tower.
  • Provided herein is an unsupported, self-standing tower comprising a plurality of the growth modules of as previously described, wherein the plurality of stacked growth modules is configurable in a radially positioned orientation, and wherein the at least one lateral growth opening of each growth module is orientable in a different direction from the lateral growth opening of the growth module above and or below itself.
  • In some embodiments, the growth module of any one of the previously described configurations, further comprise an attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to a vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, the attachment mechanism comprises: a “T”-bar; a “V” bar; a hinge; a live hinge; a fixed lip; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch, a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; and any combination thereof; wherein the live hinge is further configured to allow a growth module to be opened or closed to allow for the insertion of removal of a plant from the growth module. As shown in more detail and in the non-limiting configurations in FIGS. 5A and 5B, 6A and 6B, and 7A and 7B, the hydroponic plant growth module 104, spacer 105 or sensor module 110 are configured to be mounted to the vertical column through one or a combination of fixed attachment features 109, such as hinges, wires, through-holes, bayonette features, suspension cables, notched steps or grooves. In some embodiments of the system, the hydroponic plant growth module additionally comprises a live hinge for detachable fixation to the vertical growth columns. In some embodiments, the hydroponic plant growth module additionally comprises a fixed lip or hinge arrangement or a (separable) ring for detachable fixation to the vertical growth columns.
  • Further still, in some embodiments, the hydroponic plant growth modules 104 and spacer modules 105 are configured in alterative shapes and configurations as illustrated in FIGS. 6A through 7C. As illustrated herein, the hydroponic plant growth module 104 is configured in a circular disc shape, having a through hole 102 x configured to mate with and secure to the vertical growth column 102. As illustrated herein the vertical growth column 102 is configured in a cylindrical shape, as is the through-hole 102 x of the hydroponic plant growth module 104. As noted previously, fixation of alternatively shaped hydroponic plant growth modules to the column at fixed vertical locations can be achieved through alternate means comprising wires, through-holes, bayonette features, suspension cables, notched steps or grooves. However, as one of skill in the art would easily recognize upon reading this disclosure, the shape of the vertical growth column 104 and/or the hydroponic plant growth module through-hole 102 x (attachment mechanism) can be any shape, as illustrated by the growth module configuration in FIG. 7C, illustrating a polygonal configuration.
  • As further illustrated in FIG. 7C, a hydroponic plant growth module 104 can be configured with “sub-modules” 104 s; comprising a plurality of hydroponic plant sub-module growth modules encased in a larger growth module housing. Each hydroponic plant sub-module 104 s can detachably assemble to a primary hydroponic plant growth module 104, functions as a separate hydroponic plant growth module, and includes drain holes 13 and a lateral opening 106. Such a configuration would be ideally suited for smaller plants, seedlings and starter plant growth conditions, allowing for logistically compact growing conditions when spacing is less critical. Starter plants could then be re-seeded into larger hydroponic plant growth modules and placed back into the growth circuit at appropriate times to maintain a continuous growth pattern within the system.
  • Yet another configuration, as illustrated in FIG. 7B, shows a circular hydroponic plant growth module 104, as described above, configured for vertical suspension from an overhead supporting structure 101, 103 and/or conveyance system 200(a). In this configuration, a vertical growth column is configured to be free-hanging, and optionally allowed to spin or sway and provided with a counter-weight 40 for added stability. The hydroponic plant growth modules may alternately be configured with or without hydroponic plant sub-modules 104 s, as described above, as well as separable, expandable side-walls 25.
  • In some embodiments, as illustrated in FIG. 7D, the growth module further comprises a growth medium 111 and a wicking medium (not shown) placed within the enclosure; wherein the wicking medium is wrapped within the growth medium and is configured to contain a root structure of the plant, and wherein the growth medium is configured to support the root structure of the plant 30 contained within the root system and to capture and hold moisture and nutrients, and wherein the wicking medium is configured to direct moisture and nutrients to the root structure of a plant contained therein.
  • Provided herein is a vertical column, configured for detachable attachment to the growth module, the vertical column comprising a periphery having: a square shape; a rectangular shape; a generally circular shape; a partially circular shape, triangular shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; any geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column comprises an at least partially hollow interior. In some embodiments, the vertical column is configured for attachment to a conveyance system for conveying the growth module to and/or away from the vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column configured for attachment to the conveyance system at a bottom end and/or a top end of the vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, of the unsupported, self-standing tower, a top end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a conveyance system.
  • In some embodiments, a bottom end of the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to the conveyance system.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column further comprises at least one attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to the growth module.
  • In some embodiments, the at least one attachment mechanism comprises: a “T”-rail; a “V”-rail; a separable ring; a protruding notch; an indented notch; a slot; a groove; a through-hole and retaining pin; a magnet; or any combination thereof.
  • In some embodiments, the at least one attachment mechanism is on a longitudinal surface of said vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, the at least one growth module is attached in a radial pattern about the periphery of the vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column is between: approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 60.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 50.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 40.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 30.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 25.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 20.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 19.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 18.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 17.0 feet tall; approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 16.0 feet tall; or approximately 10.0 feet and approximately 15.0 feet tall.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column is configured to provide at least one of: a forced airflow conduit; and a gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit; wherein the forced airflow conduit and the gravity-feed water and nutritional conduit are optionally, within the interior of the vertical column, or on the exterior of the vertical column, with ports accessible to and from an attached growth module of any shape.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column is adapted to support a plurality of the growth modules.
  • In some embodiments of the vertical column or unsupported, self-standing tower of any one of the previously described configurations, a top end of the vertical column or the unsupported, self-standing tower is configured for attachment to a support structure capable of supporting a plurality other vertical columns or unsupported, self-standing towers.
  • In some embodiments, of the vertical column or unsupported, self-standing tower the vertical column or unsupported, self-standing tower is configured to rotate about its vertical axis when attached to the support structure for similarly exposing the attached growth modules to a light source and/or an airflow.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column further comprises: a guided vertical lift mechanism capable of supporting, raising and lowering the detachably attachable growth modules along the vertical length of the vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, the lift mechanism is configured on the exterior or the interior of the vertical column.
  • In some embodiments, the plurality of growth modules can be fixed at variable heights to accommodate variable stages of plant growth, with or without spaces between each vertical module.
  • In some embodiments, the variable heights are adjustable throughout a growth cycle.
  • In some embodiments, the plurality of growth modules can be fixed at a plurality of radial positions.
  • In some embodiments, the vertical column further comprises, a plurality of loading point locations along the length of the vertical column to facilitate loading and unloading the plurality of growth modules.
  • Certain vertical column or unsupported, self-standing towers suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include any one of the previously described configurations, where the conveyance system provides a controlled, timed movement of each vertical column or unsupported, self-standing tower, in unison with the other vertical columns or unsupported, self-standing towers attached to the conveyance system, to move a plant contained within the plurality of growth modules from a starting point location corresponding with an immature growth stage to a finishing point corresponding with a harvestable plant along a circuit within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber.
  • Certain growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include a growth medium and a wicking medium placed within an enclosure; wherein the wicking medium is wrapped within the growth medium and is configured to contain a root structure of the plant, and wherein the growth medium is configured to support the root structure of the plant contained within the root system and to capture and hold moisture and nutrients, and wherein the wicking medium is configured to direct moisture and nutrients to the root structure of a plant contained therein.
  • Certain growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include a growth medium; a wicking medium; a root cluster of a germinated plant; or any combination thereof; wherein the environmental sensor or environmental sensor array is configured to collect environmental data within and around a growth module and transmit said data to a master control system capable of compiling the environmental data and adjusting environmental conditions within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber containing said growth module.
  • Certain growth modules suitable for use with or in the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure include a wicking strip and growth media angularly oriented within the growth module so as to promote the growth of the germinated plant through the lateral growth opening, wherein the angular orientation is an angle comprising between: about 0.0 degrees to about 45.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 40.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 35.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 34.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 33.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 32.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; about 0.0 degrees to about 31.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal; or about 0.0 degrees to about 30.0 degrees vertical of parallel to horizontal.
  • Growth modules suitable for use with the control and sensor systems of the present disclosure may comprise an enclosure configured to securely hold at least one plant, wherein the enclosure further comprises at least two of the following: at least one vertical wall; a drain aperture in the enclosure; at least a partial lower surface connected to the enclosure; at least a partial upper surface connected to the enclosure; at least one lateral growth opening in the enclosure configured to permit growth of the at least one plant therethrough, and to encourage lateral growth of the at least one plant away from the growth module; a non-perpendicular, surface relative to the at least one vertical wall; an attachment mechanism configured for detachable attachment to a vertical column; an environmental sensor; an environment sensor array; a growth medium; and a wicking medium; wherein the enclosure is configured to provide a containment shape comprising: a completely circular shape; a partially circular shape; an elliptical shape; an irregular geometric shape; a non-symmetric, irregular geometric shape; a symmetric, multi-sided geometric shape; a triangular shape; a rectangular shape; a square shape; a trapezoidal shape; a pentagonal shape; a hexagonal shape; a heptagonal shape; an octagonal shape; a geometric shape comprising non-flat sides; or any combination thereof; wherein the growth module is configured to support a plurality of growth modules stacked above and/or below itself, wherein the drain aperture is configured to facilitate vertical flow of fluids from the growth module to another growth module stacked below itself, wherein said lateral growth opening is configured to allow for an airflow to disrupt a boundary layer of an under-canopy of the at least one plant growing away from the growth module, wherein the environmental sensor or environmental sensor array is configured to collect environmental data within and around a growth module and transmit said data to a master control system capable of compiling the environmental data and adjusting environmental conditions within an environmentally-controlled growing chamber containing said growth module, wherein the wicking medium is wrapped within the growth medium and is configured to contain a root structure of the plant, wherein the growth medium is configured to support the root structure of the plant contained within the root system and to capture and hold moisture and nutrients, wherein the wicking medium is configured to direct moisture and nutrients to the root structure of a plant contained therein; and wherein the growth module has an adjustable height to accommodate growth of the at least one plant.
  • While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that methods and structures within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.

Claims (21)

1-19. (canceled)
20. A system for growing plants using conveyed vertical towers, the system comprising:
a growing chamber;
one or more vertical towers, wherein a first sensor unit is coupled with a first vertical tower of the one or more vertical towers, the first sensor unit comprises a first sensor and a transmitter, and the first vertical tower comprises one or more plants;
a conveyance system, wherein the conveyance system is operable to convey the one or more vertical towers from a starting point location to a finishing point location along a circuit within the growing chamber;
a processor;
a receiver operably coupled to the processor; and
a memory operably coupled to the processor storing instructions thereon, that when executed by the processor, cause the system to:
receive, via the receiver, first sensor information from the transmitter, wherein the first sensor information relates to first data captured by the first sensor, and the first vertical tower is at a first location on the circuit when the first sensor information is transmitted by the transmitter;
provide first control information to adjust at least one environmental parameter in the growing chamber, wherein the first control information is based at least in part upon the first sensor information;
provide second control information to cause the conveyance system to move the one or more vertical towers along the circuit, wherein the first vertical tower moves from the first location to a second location on the circuit based at least in part upon the second control information;
receive, via the receiver, second sensor information from the transmitter, wherein the second sensor information relates to second data captured by the first sensor, and the first vertical tower is at the second location when the second sensor information is transmitted by the transmitter; and
provide third control information to adjust the at least one environmental parameter in the growing chamber, wherein the third control information is based at least in part upon the second sensor information.
21. The system of claim 20, wherein a first plant of the one or more plants grows from a first growth stage at the starting point location to a second growth stage at the finishing point location, wherein the second growth stage is more mature than the first growth stage.
22. The system of claim 21, wherein the instructions, when executed by the processor, cause the system to:
store the first sensor information and the second sensor information associated with the first plant.
23. The system of claim 20, wherein the first vertical tower is greater than 15 feet, 20 feet, 25 feet, 40 feet, 50 feet, or 60 feet.
24. The system of claim 23, wherein the first vertical tower is less than 100 feet.
25. The system of claim 20, wherein the first data relates to air temperature, humidity, or air carbon dioxide content, and the first sensor is a temperature sensor, a humidity sensor, or a carbon dioxide sensor, respectively.
26. The system of claim 20, wherein the first data relates to plant characteristics of a first plant of the one or more plants, and the first sensor is a digital imaging device.
27. The system of claim 20, wherein the environmental parameter relates to temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide level of air in the growing chamber.
28. A computer-implemented method for growing plants using conveyed vertical towers in a growing chamber, wherein a first vertical tower comprises one or more plants, a first sensor unit is coupled with the first vertical tower, the first sensor unit comprises a first sensor and a transmitter, the first vertical tower is conveyed from a starting point location to an finishing point location along a circuit within the growing chamber using a conveyance system, the method comprising:
receiving first sensor information from the transmitter, wherein the first sensor information relates to first data captured by the first sensor, and the first vertical tower is at a first location on the circuit when the first sensor information is transmitted by the transmitter;
providing first control information to adjust at least one environmental parameter in the growing chamber, wherein the first control information is based at least in part upon the first sensor information;
providing second control information to cause the conveyance system to move the first vertical tower along the circuit, wherein the first vertical tower moves from the first location to a second location on the circuit based at least in part upon the second control information;
receiving second sensor information from the transmitter, wherein the second sensor information relates to second data captured by the first sensor, and the first vertical tower is at the second location when the second sensor information is transmitted by the transmitter; and
providing third control information to adjust the at least one environmental parameter in the growing chamber, wherein the third control information is based at least in part upon the second sensor information.
29. The method of claim 28, wherein a first plant of the one or more plants grows from a first growth stage at the starting point location to a second growth stage at the finishing point location, wherein the second growth stage is more mature than the first growth stage.
30. The method of claim 29, further comprising:
storing the first sensor information and the second sensor information associated with the first plant.
31. The method of claim 28, wherein the first data relates to air temperature, humidity, or air carbon dioxide content, and the first sensor is a temperature sensor, a humidity sensor, or a carbon dioxide sensor, respectively.
32. The method of claim 28, wherein the first data relates to plant characteristics of a first plant of the one or more plants, and the first sensor is a digital imaging device.
33. The method of claim 28, wherein the environmental parameter relates to temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide level of air in the growing chamber.
34. One or more non-transitory computer-readable media storing instructions for growing plants using conveyed vertical towers in a growing chamber, wherein a first vertical tower comprises one or more plants, a first sensor unit is coupled with the first vertical tower, the first sensor unit comprises a first sensor and a transmitter, the first vertical tower is conveyed from a starting point location to an finishing point location along a circuit within the growing chamber using a conveyance system, wherein the instructions, when executed by one or more computing devices, cause at least one of the one or more computing devices to:
receive first sensor information from the transmitter, wherein the first sensor information relates to first data captured by the first sensor, and the first vertical tower is at a first location on the circuit when the first sensor information is transmitted by the transmitter;
provide first control information to adjust at least one environmental parameter in the growing chamber, wherein the first control information is based at least in part upon the first sensor information;
provide second control information to cause the conveyance system to move the first vertical tower along the circuit, wherein the first vertical tower moves from the first location to a second location on the circuit based at least in part upon the second control information;
receive second sensor information from the transmitter, wherein the second sensor information relates to second data captured by the first sensor, and the first vertical tower is at the second location when the second sensor information is transmitted by the transmitter; and
provide third control information to adjust the at least one environmental parameter in the growing chamber, wherein the third control information is based at least in part upon the second sensor information.
35. The computer-readable media of claim 34, wherein a first plant of the one or more plants grows from a first growth stage at the starting point location to a second growth stage at the finishing point location, wherein the second growth stage is more mature than the first growth stage.
36. The computer-readable media of claim 35, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more computing devices, cause at least one of the one or more computing devices to:
store the first sensor information and the second sensor information associated with the first plant.
37. The computer-readable media of claim 34, wherein the first data relates to air temperature, humidity, or air carbon dioxide content, and the first sensor is a temperature sensor, a humidity sensor, or a carbon dioxide sensor, respectively.
38. The computer-readable media of claim 34, wherein the first data relates to plant characteristics of a first plant of the one or more plants, and the first sensor is a digital imaging device.
39. The computer-readable media of claim 34, wherein the environmental parameter relates to temperature, humidity, or carbon dioxide level of air in the growing chamber.
US17/301,671 2016-07-14 2021-04-11 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system Abandoned US20210235643A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US17/301,671 US20210235643A1 (en) 2016-07-14 2021-04-11 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201662362380P 2016-07-14 2016-07-14
US201662366510P 2016-07-25 2016-07-25
US201662369520P 2016-08-01 2016-08-01
US15/278,564 US10973185B2 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system
US17/301,671 US20210235643A1 (en) 2016-07-14 2021-04-11 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15/278,564 Continuation US10973185B2 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20210235643A1 true US20210235643A1 (en) 2021-08-05

Family

ID=60941644

Family Applications (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15/278,181 Abandoned US20180014471A1 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Vertical growth tower and module for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system
US15/278,564 Active 2036-12-08 US10973185B2 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system
US15/278,148 Active US10306847B2 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Environmentally controlled vertical farming system
US17/301,671 Abandoned US20210235643A1 (en) 2016-07-14 2021-04-11 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system

Family Applications Before (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15/278,181 Abandoned US20180014471A1 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Vertical growth tower and module for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system
US15/278,564 Active 2036-12-08 US10973185B2 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system
US15/278,148 Active US10306847B2 (en) 2016-07-14 2016-09-28 Environmentally controlled vertical farming system

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (4) US20180014471A1 (en)
WO (3) WO2018013163A1 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20210007300A1 (en) * 2018-03-16 2021-01-14 Alinda Chandra Mondal Soil Ecosystem Management and Intelligent Farming Arrangement

Families Citing this family (165)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US10405506B2 (en) * 2009-04-20 2019-09-10 Parabel Ltd. Apparatus for fluid conveyance in a continuous loop
US9653647B2 (en) * 2013-06-14 2017-05-16 Micron Technology, Inc. Ultrathin solid state dies and methods of manufacturing the same
WO2015103310A1 (en) 2013-12-31 2015-07-09 Dispersolar, Llc Harvesting, transmission, spectral modification and delivery of sunlight to shaded areas of plants
US10499575B2 (en) * 2014-05-22 2019-12-10 Aero Development Corp. Modular aeroponic growing column and system
US10334762B2 (en) * 2015-01-29 2019-06-25 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development Lp Movable rack
BR112016013897A2 (en) * 2015-02-23 2017-08-08 E Smarts Global Licensing Ltd SYSTEM AND GROWTH METHOD FOR A HIGH DENSITY SOILLESS PLANT
MX388668B (en) 2015-06-10 2025-03-20 Parabel Nutrition Inc Methods and systems for extracting protein and carbohydrate rich products from a microcrop and compositions thereof
BR112017026539B1 (en) 2015-06-10 2022-01-25 Peter Sherlock Processes for producing an absorbent product from a microculture, animal litter created from the processing of a microculture and diaper product
AU2016275066B2 (en) 2015-06-10 2020-09-10 Parabel Nutrition, Inc. Apparatuses, methods, and systems for cultivating a microcrop involving a floating coupling device
EP3320001A4 (en) 2015-07-06 2019-06-12 Parabel Ltd. METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR EXTRACTING A POLYSACCHARIDE PRODUCT FROM MICROCULTURE AND ASSOCIATED COMPOSITIONS
MX390567B (en) 2015-08-10 2025-03-20 Parabel Nutrition Inc METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR EXTRACTING REDUCED OXALIC ACID PROTEIN FROM AQUATIC SPECIES AND ITS COMPOSITIONS
EP3346849A4 (en) 2015-09-10 2019-02-13 Parabel Ltd. METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR TREATING A HIGH CONCENTRATION PROTEIN FROM A MICROPLANT AND ASSOCIATED COMPOSITIONS
US20170354100A1 (en) * 2016-06-10 2017-12-14 Jason Snyder Safety Grow Pod
JP6812668B2 (en) * 2016-06-17 2021-01-13 東洋製罐グループホールディングス株式会社 Hydroponics system
GB2551802B (en) * 2016-06-30 2021-10-13 Growpura Ltd A system and method of growing plants in the absence of soil
US10863679B2 (en) * 2016-09-08 2020-12-15 Fork Farms Holdings, Llc Modular plant growth apparatus
US20180153115A1 (en) * 2016-12-07 2018-06-07 Rajesh Edke Appratus for crop/plant/life-form cultivation
DE102016015193B3 (en) * 2016-12-21 2018-03-01 Karin Peiter Agricultural unit, agricultural module, agricultural system and method of operating an agricultural system
CN110290696B (en) * 2017-01-20 2022-04-01 绿植工厂私人有限公司 Agricultural system and method
US10736285B2 (en) * 2017-01-27 2020-08-11 Mjnn, Llc Hydroponic plant display system
US11102942B2 (en) * 2017-06-14 2021-08-31 Grow Solutions Tech Llc Systems and methods for removing defective seeds and plants in a grow pod
US10905058B2 (en) * 2017-06-14 2021-02-02 Grow Solutions Tech Llc Devices, systems, and methods for providing and using a pump control module in a master controller in an assembly line grow pod
US11067524B2 (en) * 2017-06-14 2021-07-20 Grow Solutions Tech Llc Systems and methods for testing for contaminants in an assembly line grow pod
JOP20190048A1 (en) * 2017-06-14 2019-03-19 Grow Solutions Tech Llc Systems and methods for self-learning in a grow pod
US11547070B2 (en) * 2017-06-27 2023-01-10 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of The University Of Arizona Vertical-hive green box cultivation systems
MY206477A (en) 2017-07-14 2024-12-18 Source Global Pbc Systems for controlled treatment of water with ozone and related methods therefor
US20190014726A1 (en) * 2017-07-17 2019-01-17 Stewart E. Erickson Crop growth enhancement technology
US10681877B1 (en) * 2017-08-02 2020-06-16 Robert Goodwin Plant growing system
US10694682B2 (en) 2017-08-24 2020-06-30 Vertical Air Solutions LLC System and method for providing carbon dioxide and circulating air for a vertical gardening system
US10806099B2 (en) 2017-08-24 2020-10-20 Vertical Air Solutions LLC System and method for providing carbon dioxide and circulating air for a vertical gardening system
MX2020002481A (en) 2017-09-05 2021-02-15 Zero Mass Water Inc Systems and methods to produce liquid water extracted from air.
WO2019050866A1 (en) 2017-09-05 2019-03-14 Zero Mass Water, Inc. Systems and methods for managing production and distribution of liquid water extracted from air
EP3662201B1 (en) 2017-09-19 2023-06-07 Agnetix, Inc. Fluid-cooled led-based lighting methods and apparatus for controlled environment agriculture
US10999976B2 (en) 2017-09-19 2021-05-11 Agnetix, Inc. Fluid-cooled lighting systems and kits for controlled agricultural environments, and methods for installing same
US11013078B2 (en) 2017-09-19 2021-05-18 Agnetix, Inc. Integrated sensor assembly for LED-based controlled environment agriculture (CEA) lighting, and methods and apparatus employing same
US10506771B2 (en) * 2017-10-13 2019-12-17 Dominic Crain Modular hydroponic system
US11310976B1 (en) * 2017-10-29 2022-04-26 John Thomas Cross Modular systems and methods for propagating plants in hydroponic and aquaponic environments
CA2986879A1 (en) * 2017-11-28 2019-05-28 Warren Vesty Recirculating plant growing mechanism
EP3716752B1 (en) * 2017-11-30 2024-07-31 Onepointone, Inc. Vertical farming systems and methods
WO2019126654A1 (en) 2017-12-22 2019-06-27 Cuello Joel L Axial dispersion bioreactor (adbr) for production of microalgae and other microorganisms
AU2019240064B2 (en) 2018-03-21 2024-05-23 Mjnn Llc Vertical grow tower conveyance system for controlled environment agriculture
WO2019213652A1 (en) 2018-05-04 2019-11-07 Agnetix, Inc. Methods, apparatus, and systems for lighting and distributed sensing in controlled agricultural environments
US11483981B1 (en) * 2018-05-14 2022-11-01 Crop One Holdings, Inc. Systems and methods for providing a low energy use farm
WO2019227369A1 (en) * 2018-05-31 2019-12-05 深圳市蚂蚁雄兵物联技术有限公司 Plant growth intelligent control system and method, electronic terminal and readable storage medium
US10750675B2 (en) * 2018-06-20 2020-08-25 Mjnn, Llc Vertical hydroponic tower plant container handling system
CN112804873A (en) * 2018-07-13 2021-05-14 洛斯Tc 私人有限公司 Plant propagation systems, devices and methods
JP6488052B1 (en) * 2018-07-19 2019-03-20 藤澤建機株式会社 Cultivation method, cultivation equipment, and cultivation apparatus
US11951610B2 (en) 2018-07-31 2024-04-09 Mjnn Llc Opening apparatus for use with a multi-piece, hinged, hydroponic tower
US11206774B2 (en) 2018-08-02 2021-12-28 Pod Farms, LLC Vertical hydroponic growing system and method
US11903351B2 (en) 2018-08-02 2024-02-20 Pod Farms, LLC Grow cups for hydroponic growing systems
WO2020028940A1 (en) * 2018-08-08 2020-02-13 Orlar Pty Ltd Horticultural apparatus and methods
WO2020041762A1 (en) * 2018-08-24 2020-02-27 Cuello Joel L Mobile and modular cultivation systems for vertical farming
CA3237547A1 (en) * 2018-08-30 2020-03-05 Canon Virginia, Inc. Autonomous monitoring system
US11576310B2 (en) * 2018-08-31 2023-02-14 Agritainer, Llc Systems and methods for efficient fogponic agriculture
US12274214B2 (en) 2018-09-07 2025-04-15 Urban Geoponic Llc Hydroponic tower assemblies and methods
US11107386B2 (en) * 2018-09-10 2021-08-31 Lumileds Llc Pixel diagnostics with a bypass mode
US11337381B1 (en) * 2018-09-25 2022-05-24 Grow Computer, Inc. Apparatus and method for discovery and control of internet-of-things components for indoor agriculture and controlled environment systems
US20210315170A1 (en) * 2018-10-08 2021-10-14 Mjnn Llc Control of latent and sensible loads in controlled environment agriculture
US20200124566A1 (en) 2018-10-22 2020-04-23 Zero Mass Water, Inc. Systems and methods for detecting and measuring oxidizing compounds in test fluids
CN113226014A (en) * 2018-10-24 2021-08-06 奥普提-哈维斯特公司 Light guide platform for cultivation variety growing environment
US11700804B2 (en) 2018-10-30 2023-07-18 Mjnn Llc Production facility layout for automated controlled environment agriculture
SG11202103280WA (en) 2018-10-30 2021-05-28 Mjnn Llc Grow tower processing for controlled environment agriculture system
CN113163720A (en) 2018-11-13 2021-07-23 阿格尼泰克斯股份有限公司 Fluid cooled LED-based lighting method and apparatus for controlled environment agriculture with integrated camera and/or sensor and wireless communication
US10990875B2 (en) * 2018-11-28 2021-04-27 International Business Machines Corporation Neural network forecasting for tiered hydroponic natural farming configurations
AU2019403480B2 (en) 2018-12-21 2025-11-13 Mjnn Llc Indexing plants in two-dimensional and three-dimensional space in a controlled growing environment
JP2022068380A (en) * 2019-03-11 2022-05-10 株式会社ファームシップ Method for cultivating plants, and system for cultivating plants
EP3945779A4 (en) 2019-03-28 2022-12-14 Precision Process Systems LLC HORTICULTURAL PHENOTYPICAL SYSTEMS AND PROCEDURES
AU2020262259B2 (en) 2019-04-22 2025-09-11 Source Global, PBC Water vapor adsorption air drying system and method for generating liquid water from air
WO2020220115A1 (en) 2019-04-30 2020-11-05 AVA Technologies Inc. Gardening apparatus
US11610158B2 (en) * 2019-05-02 2023-03-21 Mjnn Llc Automated placement of plant varieties for optimum performance within a grow space subject to environmental condition variability
WO2020227191A1 (en) 2019-05-08 2020-11-12 Mjnn Llc Apparatus for grasping a grow tower
US11723328B2 (en) 2019-05-08 2023-08-15 Mjnn Llc Cleaning apparatus for use with a plant support tower
EP3965559A4 (en) 2019-05-09 2023-04-26 80 Acres Urban Agriculture Inc. Method and apparatus for high-density indoor farming
US20220225572A1 (en) 2019-05-09 2022-07-21 Mjnn Llc Harvester for grow tower agriculture production systems
US11803172B2 (en) 2019-05-10 2023-10-31 Mjnn Llc Efficient selection of experiments for enhancing performance in controlled environment agriculture
CA3139684C (en) 2019-05-13 2024-02-20 80 Acres Urban Agriculture, Inc. System and method for controlling indoor farms remotely and user interface for same
US20220217899A1 (en) 2019-05-13 2022-07-14 Mjnn Llc Transplanter systems for automated controlled growth environments
US20200359550A1 (en) * 2019-05-13 2020-11-19 Bao Tran Farm ecosystem
CA3135567C (en) 2019-05-13 2022-09-27 Mjnn Llc Grow tower alignment mechanism
EP3968760A4 (en) * 2019-05-14 2023-05-10 Proterra Ag, Inc. AEROPONIC SYSTEMS AND COMPONENTS
USD964787S1 (en) 2019-06-04 2022-09-27 Urban Geoponic Llc Hydroponic tower
US12016278B2 (en) * 2019-06-06 2024-06-25 Mjnn Llc Irrigation system for vertical grow tower crop production facility
US10798879B1 (en) * 2019-06-27 2020-10-13 Fluence Bioengineering, Inc. Temporal, irradiance-controlled photoacclimation
FR3098083B1 (en) 2019-07-01 2022-12-23 Farm3 Cultivation system and method.
US12253249B2 (en) * 2019-08-01 2025-03-18 Schuyler David Milton Device and method for growing crops with non-fibrous and non-consumable media
US11832566B2 (en) 2019-09-20 2023-12-05 Mjnn Llc Vertical farm irrigation system with dual return pumps
US11570958B2 (en) 2019-09-20 2023-02-07 Mjnn Llc Catch mechanism facilitating loading of vertical grow towers onto grow lines in a vertical farm system
EP4030890A4 (en) * 2019-09-20 2024-01-17 Mjnn Llc Fault handling in controlled environment agriculture
CN114423278B (en) 2019-09-20 2023-10-10 Mjnn有限责任公司 Production facility layout for automated controlled environment agriculture
US11944049B2 (en) * 2019-09-20 2024-04-02 Mjnn Llc Vertical grow tower conveyance system for controlled environment agriculture including tower shuttle
WO2021055001A1 (en) 2019-09-20 2021-03-25 Mjnn Llc Grow tower drive mechanism for agriculture production systems
TR201914501A2 (en) * 2019-09-24 2021-04-21 Ertac Ciftci AEROPONIC INDOOR PLANT GROWING MODULES
WO2021061982A1 (en) * 2019-09-27 2021-04-01 Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc. Root growth platform and methods thereof
EP4037472A4 (en) * 2019-10-22 2023-10-11 Fonseca Dos Reis, Joao Luis Pinto HIGH DENSITY PLANT GROWTH SYSTEMS AND METHODS
IT201900019790A1 (en) * 2019-10-25 2021-04-25 Zero Srl VERTICAL CULTIVATION PLANT WITHOUT LAND OF VEGETABLES
EP4057799A4 (en) * 2019-11-13 2023-10-18 80 Acres Urban Agriculture Inc. Method and apparatus for autonomous indoor farming
US11707027B2 (en) 2019-12-02 2023-07-25 Fork Farms Holdings, Llc Hydroponic grow assembly
KR20220132531A (en) 2019-12-10 2022-09-30 아그네틱스, 인크. Multi-sensor imaging method and apparatus for controlled environment horticulture using irradiator and camera and/or sensor
EP4070009A1 (en) 2019-12-12 2022-10-12 Agnetix, Inc. Fluid-cooled led-based lighting fixture in close proximity grow systems for controlled environment horticulture
CN110972764B (en) * 2019-12-18 2021-09-03 台州农创客网络信息服务有限公司 Agricultural planting cabinet of growing seedlings
USD932346S1 (en) 2020-01-10 2021-10-05 AVA Technologies Inc. Planter
USD932345S1 (en) 2020-01-10 2021-10-05 AVA Technologies Inc. Plant pod
GB202001757D0 (en) 2020-02-10 2020-03-25 Intelligent Growth Solutions Ltd Irrigation system
WO2021202827A1 (en) 2020-04-01 2021-10-07 Shamrock Greens, Inc. Multi-plane configurable grow system for controlled environment agriculture
RU2735220C1 (en) * 2020-04-21 2020-10-28 Общество с ограниченной ответственностью "Городские агротехнологии" (ООО "Городские агротехнологии") Cultivation method of plant growing products in vertically oriented greenhouse complexes
CN115460907A (en) * 2020-04-27 2022-12-09 昕诺飞控股有限公司 Gardening system and method
KR102450854B1 (en) * 2020-05-14 2022-10-05 (주)그룬 Method for supply nutrient to support crop growth
US11593678B2 (en) 2020-05-26 2023-02-28 Bank Of America Corporation Green artificial intelligence implementation
US20210378161A1 (en) * 2020-06-04 2021-12-09 Crop One Holdings, Inc. Farm management system
WO2021262732A1 (en) 2020-06-24 2021-12-30 Mjnn Llc Indexing plants in two-dimensional and three-dimensional space in a controlled growing environment
DE102020119337A1 (en) 2020-07-22 2022-01-27 Nico Jany Circulatory system for the production of plants and fungi
US20230296547A1 (en) * 2020-08-03 2023-09-21 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Three-dimensional printed sensors
US11609109B2 (en) 2020-08-05 2023-03-21 Mjnn Llc Flow sensor for sensor network in controlled environment agriculture
US12478006B2 (en) 2020-08-22 2025-11-25 Mjnn Llc Controlled environment agriculture system including multiple grow space condition zones
CA3091234A1 (en) * 2020-08-27 2022-02-27 Arjun SRIKUMAR Vertical growth systems including seeders, trimmers and harvesters
WO2022061467A1 (en) * 2020-09-24 2022-03-31 Cyclofields Indoor Farming Technology Inc. Closed loop vertical disengageable aeroponic growing system
US12089545B1 (en) 2020-09-25 2024-09-17 Mjnn Llc Grow towers with overlapping funnels for automated agriculture production
US12008663B2 (en) * 2020-11-02 2024-06-11 Texas State University Comprehensive multi-criteria multi-objective economic analysis tool for growing crops
WO2022099251A1 (en) 2020-11-07 2022-05-12 Mjnn Llc Managing atmospheric gas composition in a controlled agricultural environment
US20230413746A1 (en) * 2020-11-28 2023-12-28 Lawrence Bodony Robot-assisted deep water culture hydroponics
CN112702565A (en) * 2020-12-03 2021-04-23 浙江大学 System and method for acquiring field plant phenotype information
US11503774B2 (en) * 2020-12-08 2022-11-22 Haier Us Appliance Solutions, Inc. Grow lighting profiles for indoor garden center
US20220183235A1 (en) * 2020-12-10 2022-06-16 LogiCO2 International AB Method, device and use of ventilation system for growing plants
US11211538B1 (en) 2020-12-23 2021-12-28 Joseph L. Pikulski Thermal management system for electrically-powered devices
AU2022210999A1 (en) 2021-01-19 2023-08-24 Source Global, PBC Systems and methods for generating water from air
WO2022180430A1 (en) * 2021-02-26 2022-09-01 Alnuaimi Mohamed Agroponics system
US20240164261A1 (en) * 2021-03-03 2024-05-23 Neox Public Benefit Llc Methods and Apparatus for Bio-Regulation and Templating of Plant Growth Within a Controlled Growth Capsule for the Production of Augmented Bio-Consumables
KR102736051B1 (en) * 2021-03-07 2024-11-28 박성재 Pipe Structure for Hydroponics and Hydroponics Apparatus Including the Same
US11895942B2 (en) 2021-03-10 2024-02-13 Earth Scout GBC Plant growth platform
ES1274510Y (en) * 2021-03-15 2021-10-19 Solano Navarro Cristobal Javier Portable experiment chamber with adjustable spectrum LED lighting and micro programmable control unit
WO2022217138A1 (en) 2021-04-09 2022-10-13 Grow Glide Inc. Air flow systems and methods for horticulture racks
WO2022224268A1 (en) * 2021-04-19 2022-10-27 Sky Blix Agro Science Private Limited System for controlled farming
TWI764689B (en) * 2021-04-23 2022-05-11 安赫普生技股份有限公司 Automatic control device and method for supplementing nutritive liquid
USD1028646S1 (en) 2021-04-30 2024-05-28 Opti-Harvest, Inc. Canopy unit for light harvesting
CA3207533A1 (en) * 2021-05-03 2022-11-10 Yves Daoust Energy management system and method in combined greenhouses and vertical farms
CN113325761A (en) * 2021-05-25 2021-08-31 哈尔滨工业大学 Plant growth period identification control system based on deep learning and identification control method thereof
US12029177B2 (en) 2021-07-01 2024-07-09 Haier Us Appliance Solutions, Inc. System and method for detecting a tower positioning fault using a drive assembly in an indoor garden center
US12058966B2 (en) * 2021-07-21 2024-08-13 Spacesaver Corporation Plant processing systems
AU2022313257A1 (en) 2021-07-21 2024-02-22 Mjnn Llc Vertical indexing of grow tower segments
NL2029049B1 (en) * 2021-08-25 2023-03-15 Priva Holding B V Method and system for controlling the cultivation of crops in a crop cultivation system
WO2023039061A1 (en) * 2021-09-08 2023-03-16 Cloud Produce Inc. Controller-operated vertical farming system using transportable modules
DE102021125248A1 (en) 2021-09-29 2023-03-30 ROKO Farming GmbH & Co. KG Plant production facility and cultivation method
US12302811B2 (en) 2021-10-20 2025-05-20 80 Acres Urban Agriculture, Inc. Automated indoor growing apparatuses and related methods
US12364209B2 (en) 2021-10-25 2025-07-22 Lifeponic Solutions, Llc Vertically oriented plant growing systems
IT202100027740A1 (en) * 2021-10-29 2023-04-29 Ono Exponential Farming S R L VERTICAL FARM SYSTEM
US20230177792A1 (en) * 2021-12-02 2023-06-08 Haier Us Appliance Solutions, Inc. Method of operating a camera assembly in an indoor gardening appliance
US12130595B2 (en) 2022-01-05 2024-10-29 CommonTech Corp System and methods for automated and modular controlled-environment agriculture units
US20230255148A1 (en) * 2022-02-14 2023-08-17 Clearly Grown, Inc. Produce production carousel
CN114793871B (en) * 2022-04-14 2024-01-26 北京金晟达生物电子科技有限公司 A can seal rotatory tower for planting pasture
US20230380351A1 (en) * 2022-05-04 2023-11-30 AI Grow LLC Open-source system for providing environmental data
IL293912B2 (en) * 2022-06-13 2024-03-01 A I R Agritech Ltd System and method for growing Crocus sativus and production of saffron from it
CN115119647A (en) * 2022-06-21 2022-09-30 航天智联(海南)科技有限公司 Novel digital planting structure
KR102493230B1 (en) * 2022-07-13 2023-01-30 그린씨에스(주) System for supplying nutrient solution
CN115152517B (en) * 2022-08-19 2023-11-14 广东四季景山园林建设有限公司 Maintenance method for promoting flowering of green plums
CA3267984A1 (en) 2022-09-21 2024-03-28 Mjnn Llc Localized plant site irrigation for plant support towers
DE102022124658A1 (en) 2022-09-26 2024-03-28 Storagepackaging Ug (Haftungsbeschränkt) Device for cultivating and growing plants
CN115755572A (en) * 2022-11-24 2023-03-07 泰山学院 Water planting hierarchical management redundancy system and method
WO2024145284A1 (en) 2022-12-27 2024-07-04 Mjnn Llc Tower indexing via tower interleaving
US20240215506A1 (en) * 2022-12-30 2024-07-04 Local Bounti Operating Company, Llc Linked chain gutter system for controlled environment agriculture
DE102023109522A1 (en) 2023-04-16 2024-10-17 Lite+Fog GmbH Space-optimized aeroponic plant cultivation system
US11825784B1 (en) * 2023-06-16 2023-11-28 King Faisal University Artificial intelligence enabled IoT-fog system in hydroponic automation for heterogeneous plants
WO2025010430A1 (en) * 2023-07-06 2025-01-09 Tavaci Technologies LLC Systems and methods for lowering a cart in a modular grow tower
IL305559A (en) * 2023-08-29 2025-03-01 Ariel Scient Innovations Ltd Vertical farming system
US12137646B1 (en) 2023-10-04 2024-11-12 Prince Mohammad Bin Fahd University Tower garden for vertical farming
BE1032413B1 (en) * 2024-02-21 2025-09-15 Univ Liege HYDROPONIC CULTURE DEVICE

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2244677A (en) * 1937-07-06 1941-06-10 Fay D Cornell System of plant production
US4255897A (en) * 1977-05-12 1981-03-17 Othmar Ruthner Method and apparatus for the improvement of storage of biochemical energy in plants
US20110131876A1 (en) * 2009-11-22 2011-06-09 Glen James Pettibone Combined Vertical Farm, Biofuel, Biomass, and Electric Power Generation Process and Facility
US20140200690A1 (en) * 2013-01-16 2014-07-17 Amit Kumar Method and apparatus to monitor and control conditions in a network - integrated enclosed ecosytem for growing plants
US20190133063A1 (en) * 2016-06-30 2019-05-09 H2O-Ganics Limited Systems and methods for hydroponic plant growth

Family Cites Families (68)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3254448A (en) * 1964-03-23 1966-06-07 Ruthner Othmar Installation for the artificial cultivation of plants, bacteria and other organisms
US3529379A (en) * 1968-08-08 1970-09-22 Richard Louis Ware Plant growth apparatus
IT1155847B (en) * 1978-02-27 1987-01-28 Schmidt Maria PROCESS FOR THE CONTINUOUS CYCLE OF VEGETABLES AND VERTICAL PLANT THAT REALIZES THE PROCEDURE
US4295296A (en) * 1980-01-14 1981-10-20 Kinghorn Michael H Vertical garden
US4574520A (en) 1983-09-21 1986-03-11 Arledge James M Gravity feed hydroponic system
US4669217A (en) 1984-11-17 1987-06-02 Aeroponics, Associates-1983 Ltd. Plant propagation system and apparatus
US5173079A (en) 1991-02-28 1992-12-22 Gerrish Steven R Crop testing and evaluation system
US5363594A (en) * 1991-11-07 1994-11-15 A.C.T. Inc. Vertical gardens
US5617673A (en) * 1993-11-17 1997-04-08 Takashima; Yasukazu Gravity independent photosynthetic growing system
US5404672A (en) * 1994-01-04 1995-04-11 Duraco Products, Inc. Modular column planter
US5533302A (en) 1994-07-21 1996-07-09 Lynch; Carroll L. Modular planting system
US6247268B1 (en) 1998-02-23 2001-06-19 Ronald K. Auer Hydroponic device
AUPR303801A0 (en) 2001-02-09 2001-03-08 A & B Hydroponics International Pty Ltd A hydroponic apparatus
US6691135B2 (en) 2002-03-20 2004-02-10 Deere & Company Method and system for automated tracing of an agricultural product
EP1583416A4 (en) 2002-11-27 2008-06-11 Sun-Ho Lim Hydroponic device and hydroponic pot thereof
US6840008B1 (en) 2003-10-09 2005-01-11 Chester C. Bullock Vertical planting system
US7080482B1 (en) 2004-03-12 2006-07-25 Treg Bradley Modular plant growing apparatus
US7055282B2 (en) 2004-08-11 2006-06-06 Mb3, L.L.C. Hydroponic plant cultivating apparatus
DE102005003050B3 (en) 2005-01-22 2006-06-29 Dräger Safety AG & Co. KGaA Gas sensor, for use e.g. in chemical or petroleum plants, including porous, gas-permeable, water-impermeable cap for protection against harsh environments, fittable with calibration gas supplying adapter
US7559173B2 (en) 2005-03-07 2009-07-14 Terrasphere Systems Llc Method and apparatus for growing plants in carousels
US7617057B2 (en) * 2005-12-21 2009-11-10 Inst Technology Development Expert system for controlling plant growth in a contained environment
US8375632B2 (en) 2006-11-22 2013-02-19 James Hogan Planter that can be raised, lowered and locked to a vertical support structure
WO2008088108A1 (en) 2007-01-17 2008-07-24 Posi Inc Plant cultivation apparatus with structure of multiple layers
US20090000189A1 (en) 2007-06-27 2009-01-01 Alan Black Modular planter system
US20090223128A1 (en) 2008-03-06 2009-09-10 Kuschak Brian C Hydroponic Monitor And Controller Apparatus with Network Connectivity and Remote Access
US7669366B2 (en) 2008-04-12 2010-03-02 Felknor Ventures Llc Plant retainer for retaining a plant for growth from the side or bottom of a planter
US8151518B2 (en) * 2008-06-17 2012-04-10 New York Sun Works Vertically integrated greenhouse
EP2312929A2 (en) * 2008-07-29 2011-04-27 Conley Rose, P.C. Plant growing assembly
US20100146854A1 (en) * 2008-12-15 2010-06-17 Cannon Roy D Apparatus for vertical horticulture
TWM367678U (en) * 2008-12-16 2009-11-01 Ke-Dan Ma Structure of flower wall
CN102387700A (en) 2009-02-27 2012-03-21 瓦尔森特产品(Eu)有限公司 Apparatus for growing plants
CA2659658A1 (en) 2009-03-23 2010-09-23 Terrasphere Systems Llc Apparatus for growing plants
US20110025519A1 (en) 2009-07-30 2011-02-03 Intelligent Sustainable Energy Limited Non-intrusive utility monitoring
WO2011048657A1 (en) 2009-10-19 2011-04-28 株式会社きゅぶふぁーむ Energy-saving system for vertically moving plant growing box, energy-saving method for vertically moving plant growing box, and household energy-saving device for growing plant
GB2475101B (en) * 2009-11-09 2014-01-08 Mark Laurence Wall for growing plants
WO2011061634A2 (en) 2009-11-21 2011-05-26 Glen Pettibone Modular vertical farm cell
US9010019B2 (en) 2010-03-16 2015-04-21 Marc A. Mittelmark Plant air purification enclosure apparatus and method
US9010022B2 (en) * 2010-09-09 2015-04-21 Terrasphere Systems Llc Vertical method and apparatus for growing plants
ES2446615T3 (en) * 2011-01-31 2014-03-10 Gsky Plant Systems Inc. Adjustable tray for reproduction and presentation of plants and method of use and assembly
US8847514B1 (en) 2011-05-24 2014-09-30 Aaron Reynoso Programmable lighting with multi-day variations of wavelength and intensity, optimized by crowdsourcing using an online social community network
US8893431B2 (en) 2011-05-24 2014-11-25 Ecotech Farm In a Box, LLC Farm in a box
US20130118074A1 (en) * 2011-11-10 2013-05-16 Steven FULBROOK Hydroponic modular planting system
US20150237811A1 (en) * 2011-11-15 2015-08-27 Living Systems, Inc. Modular system for plant growth and air purification
HK1202768A1 (en) 2011-12-13 2015-10-09 波德波尼克斯有限责任公司 Apparatus and method for optimizing delivery of nutrients in a hydroponics system
TWI478663B (en) 2011-12-14 2015-04-01 Ind Tech Res Inst Planting container and planting tower
EP2823705B1 (en) 2012-03-09 2018-04-18 Carlos Aznar Vidal Method and modular structure for continuously growing an aeroponic crop
US10136594B2 (en) 2012-05-18 2018-11-27 Tower Garden, Llc Aeroponic growing system and method
US20130326950A1 (en) * 2012-06-08 2013-12-12 Steven M. Nilles Vertical Agricultural Structure
US20140000163A1 (en) 2012-07-02 2014-01-02 Ming-Tsun LIN Water culture hydroponics system
US20140053463A1 (en) * 2012-08-22 2014-02-27 Abdessamad Khaled Systems, methods, and devices for insulated grain germination
EP2911503A4 (en) * 2012-10-26 2016-06-15 GreenTech Agro LLC Self-sustaining artificially controllable environment within a storage container or other enclosed space
US10111394B2 (en) 2012-12-18 2018-10-30 Garden Fresh Farms Llc Plant growing system
US20140223816A1 (en) 2013-02-12 2014-08-14 Bobby M. Parker Vertical gardening apparatus
US20150000190A1 (en) 2013-06-07 2015-01-01 AliGroWorks USA, Inc. Automated Plant Growing System
CA2973565A1 (en) 2014-01-12 2015-07-16 Kevin Friesth Automated hybrid aquaponics and bioreactor system including product processing and storage facilities with integrated robotics, control system, and renewable energy system
US9591814B2 (en) * 2014-02-13 2017-03-14 Fred Collins Light-weight modular adjustable vertical hydroponic growing system and method
US20150264868A1 (en) 2014-03-20 2015-09-24 David Smiles Method for growing and distributing live food
US8966815B1 (en) 2014-03-20 2015-03-03 David Smiles Method for growing and distributing live food
US9357715B2 (en) 2014-05-01 2016-06-07 Brian Cottrell Vertical planter
US10631481B2 (en) 2014-05-11 2020-04-28 University Of Wyoming Modular hydroponic rack system for crop cultivation and transport
US10499575B2 (en) 2014-05-22 2019-12-10 Aero Development Corp. Modular aeroponic growing column and system
US20160066525A1 (en) 2014-09-05 2016-03-10 Group Rate Deals, LLC d/b/a Earth Prime Inc. Hydroponic garden system
EP3209112A4 (en) * 2014-10-21 2018-10-03 Avid Growing Systems Inc. System, apparatus and method for growing marijuana
WO2016070196A1 (en) 2014-10-31 2016-05-06 Podponics, Llc Nested plant grow tray
USD758917S1 (en) 2015-01-16 2016-06-14 The Green Polka Dot Box Inc. Planter
WO2016118175A1 (en) 2015-01-23 2016-07-28 Podponics, Inc. Method and apparatus for efficient lighting element operation
WO2016191596A1 (en) * 2015-05-26 2016-12-01 Delos Living Llc Green wall modular system
MX2018004070A (en) * 2015-10-08 2018-08-01 Massivia Grow Holdings Llc CULTURE SYSTEMS AND METHODS.

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2244677A (en) * 1937-07-06 1941-06-10 Fay D Cornell System of plant production
US4255897A (en) * 1977-05-12 1981-03-17 Othmar Ruthner Method and apparatus for the improvement of storage of biochemical energy in plants
US20110131876A1 (en) * 2009-11-22 2011-06-09 Glen James Pettibone Combined Vertical Farm, Biofuel, Biomass, and Electric Power Generation Process and Facility
US20140200690A1 (en) * 2013-01-16 2014-07-17 Amit Kumar Method and apparatus to monitor and control conditions in a network - integrated enclosed ecosytem for growing plants
US20190133063A1 (en) * 2016-06-30 2019-05-09 H2O-Ganics Limited Systems and methods for hydroponic plant growth

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20210007300A1 (en) * 2018-03-16 2021-01-14 Alinda Chandra Mondal Soil Ecosystem Management and Intelligent Farming Arrangement

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US10306847B2 (en) 2019-06-04
US20180014485A1 (en) 2018-01-18
WO2018013162A1 (en) 2018-01-18
WO2018013163A1 (en) 2018-01-18
US10973185B2 (en) 2021-04-13
US20180014486A1 (en) 2018-01-18
US20180014471A1 (en) 2018-01-18
WO2018013161A1 (en) 2018-01-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20210235643A1 (en) Control and sensor systems for an environmentally controlled vertical farming system
Kabir et al. Technological trends and engineering issues on vertical farms: a review
US20150305258A1 (en) Methods and apparatus for a hybrid distributed hydroculture system
US20240138327A1 (en) System and method for plant indexing in a hydroponic farming environment and a hydroponic farming environment
KR102400496B1 (en) Smart farm, smart farm management method and apparatus
US20230143014A1 (en) Optimizing growing process in a hybrid growing environment using computer vision and artificial intelligence
US20190069497A1 (en) Methods and apparatus for a hybrid distributed hydroculture system
CN108076915A (en) A kind of smart three-dimensional cultivation system
US11974531B1 (en) Timed vertical plant transport in indoor farming
KR20160088019A (en) Plant factory system for special crops
CN108961909A (en) It is a kind of to the miniature farm of intelligence imparted knowledge to students and its management system
WO2023086221A1 (en) Simulation and automated control of physical systems
CN108876681A (en) A kind of intelligence control plant growth teaching platform
Rozilan et al. Design and fabrication of nutrient film technique (NFT) hydroponic system
Šalagovič et al. Microclimate monitoring in commercial tomato (Solanum Lycopersicum L.) greenhouse production and its effect on plant growth, yield and fruit quality
CN110580075B (en) Planting environment adjusting system and method
US20250331478A1 (en) Root growth optimization method
CN204994345U (en) Intelligence system of growing seedlings
KR20190004178A (en) Multistage Plant Cultivating Device
CN210626998U (en) Planting environment adjusting system
Li et al. CO2 balance of a commercial closed system with artificial lighting for producing lettuce plants
CN104731139A (en) Family garden intelligent control system and control method thereof
Kaveesha et al. Optimizing Indoor Lettuce Cultivation: Evaluating the Impact of Artificial Light and Parameter Monitoring Using an IoT Device
Sethi Greenhouse Engineering: Software-driven Design and Modelling for Optimal Microclimate Control
Al-Kodmany Cultivating Tomorrow

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: APPLICATION DISPATCHED FROM PREEXAM, NOT YET DOCKETED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: DOCKETED NEW CASE - READY FOR EXAMINATION

AS Assignment

Owner name: MJNN LLC, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:SEE JANE FARM, INC.;REEL/FRAME:060644/0255

Effective date: 20160923

Owner name: SEE JANE FARM, INC., CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:STOREY, NATHANIEL R.;CREECHLEY, JAREMY;SIGNING DATES FROM 20160915 TO 20160916;REEL/FRAME:060647/0770

AS Assignment

Owner name: BRIGHT AGROTECH, INC., WYOMING

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:BRIGHT AGROTECH, INC.;REEL/FRAME:065074/0105

Effective date: 20170111

Owner name: MJNN LLC, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:BRIGHT AGROTECH, INC.;REEL/FRAME:065074/0232

Effective date: 20221024

Owner name: BRIGHT AGROTECH, INC., WYOMING

Free format text: NUNC PRO TUNC ASSIGNMENT;ASSIGNORS:SMITH, DAMON HENRY;SCOGGINS, BRIAN PAUL;BROWN, CENA ELISE;SIGNING DATES FROM 20220916 TO 20220920;REEL/FRAME:065073/0917

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NON FINAL ACTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE TO NON-FINAL OFFICE ACTION ENTERED AND FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: FINAL REJECTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE AFTER FINAL ACTION FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: ADVISORY ACTION MAILED

AS Assignment

Owner name: ONE MADISON GROUP - PLENTY II, LLC, AS COLLATERAL AGENT, NEW YORK

Free format text: SECURITY INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:MJNN LLC;REEL/FRAME:070364/0725

Effective date: 20250221

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION

AS Assignment

Owner name: MJNN LLC, WYOMING

Free format text: TERMINATION AND RELEASE OF SECURITY INTEREST IN PATENTS AT REEL 070364/FRAME 0725;ASSIGNOR:ONE MADISON GROUP - PLENTY II, LLC, AS COLLATERAL AGENT;REEL/FRAME:071468/0487

Effective date: 20250529