wietefras
Well-Known Member
No, I'm talking about the canopy also.you have made a circular argument here, and you don't seem to realize it. Your assumption (which is different from everyone else) is PPFD if measured in the whole grow the room, the entire footprint, but everyone here is taking about PPFD ONLY for the canopy.
Or rather, it doesn't matter. The PPF determines how much light goes in and the surface area determines the average density.
It's like throwing 100 liters of water in a tub that's 100x100cm. What is the height of the water? If you push the water down (push a bucket in) on one side or pull it up (suck on a pipe) the local density (height) will change, but does the average height of the water change? No of course not. Same with how PPF gets divided over an area resulting in a average PPFD that can not change.
'So the increase in PPFD under the COB is caused by taking away light from other parts of the grow area. In the end the average PPFD over the whole grow area is still the same.'
That is indeed the mistake many people seem to be making.here's your mistake. The PPFD over the whole grow area is the same because the size doesn't change, but when you take that spread and redirect it down, your by definition get more PPFDENSITY because the same amount of photons are now directed towards the canopy and not the entire grow room. And because you now have more photons in a smaller area, by definition your penetration will also increase.
Where do you think the extra light for the higher intensities is created from?
Reflectors don't create light. They bundle the available light into a smaller area. Outside that area the densities are now lower.
Again, PPF is like throwing a buckt of water in a confined space. You might push it down on one side, but it will go up on another side. The average depth will always be the same.
And that is another mistake. The charts Robin has posted only show only the light that is inside a measuring grid. The COBs without optics throw much light outside that square and this is not counted. Do a proper flat plane integration and you will see that all the light is still there and averag PPFD will not have changed. Over a much larger surface than 2'x2' though.This is clearly demonstrated in the charts Robin has posted. Am i missing something here? Regardless of all this theory, real world results show an increase in yield with the use of optics, so tell me what happening here other than more photons being delivered in a more useful way to the plants.
Really, the average PPFD can not change by using a reflector (ignoring reflection losses for the moment). The density increase that you see under the COB means that you are decreasing the density somewhere else.