Multi-Piece Hydroponic Tower
20190269082 ยท 2019-09-05
Assignee
Inventors
- Brice Klein (San Francisco, CA, US)
- Michael Flynn (Palo Alto, CA, US)
- Alexandre Le Roux (Menlo Park, CA, US)
- Meaghan Fitzgerald (San Francisco, CA, US)
- Matthew Matera (San Francisco, CA, US)
- Mark Cuson (Los Altos, CA, US)
- Alex Ibrahim (Pacifica, CA, US)
Cpc classification
F16B5/0664
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02P60/21
GENERAL 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
A01G31/06
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A01G31/06
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A multi-piece hydroponic tower is provided which utilizes separate body and face components coupled together using either permanent or temporary fasteners, where the tower face includes a plurality of plant container compatible cut-outs. By utilizing separate body and face components, the end user is able to easily switch tower face plates in order to adapt the tower to different plant container configurations. The multi-piece tower design also simplifies tower construction as well as tower maintenance between planting cycles.
Claims
1. A multi-piece hydroponic tower, comprising: a tower body; a tower face, said tower face comprising a plurality of plant container cut-outs, said plurality of plant container cut-outs configured to accept a plurality of plant containers; and a plurality of fasteners configured to attach said tower face to said tower body, wherein said tower face is attached to said tower body with said plurality of fasteners to form a cavity, said cavity configured to provide a passageway for a water/nutrient mix.
2. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, wherein each fastener of said plurality of fasteners is a permanent fastener, and wherein said plurality of fasteners permanently attach said tower face to said tower body.
3. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, wherein each fastener of said plurality of fasteners is a temporary fastener, wherein said plurality of fasteners temporarily attach said tower face to said tower body, and wherein said tower face is detachable from said tower body.
4. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, wherein said tower body is a dual-sided tower body, said multi-piece hydroponic tower further comprising: a second tower face; and a second plurality of fasteners, wherein said second tower face is attached to said tower body with said second plurality of fasteners to form a second cavity, said second cavity configured to provide a second passageway for said water/nutrient mix.
5. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 4, said second tower face comprising a second plurality of plant container cut-outs, said second plurality of plant container cut-outs configured to accept a second plurality of plant containers.
6. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 4, wherein each fastener of said plurality of fasteners and said second plurality of fasteners is a permanent fastener, wherein said plurality of fasteners permanently attach said tower face to said tower body, and wherein said second plurality of fasteners permanently attach said second tower face to said tower body.
7. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 4, wherein each fastener of said plurality of fasteners and said second plurality of fasteners is a temporary fastener, wherein said plurality of fasteners temporarily attach said tower face to said tower body, wherein said second plurality of fasteners temporarily attach said second tower face to said tower body, wherein said tower face is detachable from said tower body, and wherein said second tower face is detachable from said tower body.
8. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, wherein said multi-piece hydroponic tower is a dual-sided hydroponic tower, wherein: said tower body further comprising: a first tower body side wall corresponding to said cavity; a second tower body side wall corresponding to a second cavity; a second tower face, said second tower face comprising a second plurality of plant container cut-outs, said second plurality of plant container cut-outs configured to accept a second plurality of plant containers; and a first portion of a cavity dividing center wall; and said tower face further comprising: a third tower body side wall corresponding to said cavity; a fourth tower body side wall corresponding to said second cavity; and a second portion of said cavity dividing center wall, wherein attachment of said tower face to said tower body with said plurality of fasteners forms said cavity and said second cavity, said second cavity configured to provide a second passageway for said water/nutrient mix.
9. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, wherein a first dimension corresponding to a tower face width is larger than a second dimension corresponding to a tower body width, wherein a first portion of said tower face extends beyond a first side wall of said tower body, wherein a second portion of said tower face extends beyond a second side wall of said tower body, and wherein a third portion of said tower face is centered relative to said tower body.
10. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, further comprising at least one fin extending from a rear surface of said tower body in a direction away from said cavity.
11. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, said tower body comprising a first tapered side wall, a second tapered side wall and a rear wall.
12. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, said tower face further comprising a plurality of indexing marks.
13. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 12, said plurality of indexing marks selected from the group consisting of holes, indentations and dye marks.
14. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, further comprising a plurality of vertical ridges formed on an interior surface of a rear tower body wall.
15. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 14, said plurality of vertical ridges of uniform width.
16. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 14, said plurality of vertical ridges of non-uniform width.
17. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 1, said tower body and said tower face each fabricated from a plastic material.
18. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 17, said plastic material selected from the group consisting of polyethylene, polypropylene, polyvinyl chloride, polytetrafluoroethylene, and acrylonitrile butadiene styrene.
19. The multi-piece hydroponic tower of claim 17, wherein said plastic material is white.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] It should be understood that the accompanying figures are only meant to illustrate, not limit, the scope of the invention and should not be considered to be to scale. Additionally, the same reference label on different figures should be understood to refer to the same component or a component of similar functionality.
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DESCRIPTION OF THE SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
[0034] As used herein, the singular forms a, an and the are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. The terms comprises, comprising, includes, and/or including, as used herein, specify the presence of stated features, process steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, process steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof. As used herein, the term and/or and the symbol / are meant to include any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items. Additionally, while the terms first, second, etc. may be used herein to describe various steps, calculations, or components, these steps, calculations, or components should not be limited by these terms, rather these terms are only used to distinguish one step, calculation, or component from another. For example, a first calculation could be termed a second calculation, and, similarly, a first step could be termed a second step, and, similarly, a first component could be termed a second component, without departing from the scope of this disclosure.
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[0037] Separating the body portion (e.g., dual-sided body portion 103 or single-sided body portion 201) of the hydroponic tower from its face (e.g., face plate 105) adds flexibility that cannot be achieved when the tower body and face are fabricated as a single piece. Specifically, the same body portion can be used with a variety of different faces, thus allowing a grower to easily change between different plant containers, different cut-out designs, and different spacing between plants, all of which provide flexibility at minimal additional cost. Additionally, this same flexibility allows the grower to easily adapt to new types of plant containers as they become available without requiring that all tower components be replaced. Instead, in a typical situation the grower only needs to replace the front face in order to adapt to a new plant container design.
[0038] In a traditional hydroponic tower, the tower is extruded as a single piece. Due to the inclusion of the tower cavity, however, the extrusion process must operate at a relatively low rate in order to allow sufficient time for the heat contained within the tower cavity to be released. By separating the face from the tower body, the heat generated during the extrusion process is no longer trapped within the tower body, thereby allowing the extrusion process to operate much more quickly, thereby lowering manufacturing costs. Additionally, separating the tower into a body portion and a face portion allows features such as the plant container cut-outs 101 to be punched out during the extrusion process. This is in marked contrast, both in terms of time and cost, to the prior approach of utilizing a computer numerical control (CNC) machine to fabricate the cut-outs/features after the tower extrusion has been completed.
[0039] The multi-piece tower of the present invention can use either temporary or permanent fasteners to attach the tower face (e.g., face 105) to the tower body (e.g., body 103 and body 201). Permanent fasteners allow the manufacturing benefits associated with the multi-piece design to be achieved, specifically lower fabrication costs and better quality control per component, but forgo the advantages offered by having a removable front face. In those applications when a permanent fastener to couple the face to the tower body is desired, bonding (e.g., solvent bonding) is the preferred technique. Assuming the bond is continuous along the face-to-body joints, this approach distributes loads evenly over a large area while simultaneously eliminating water leaks between the face and the tower body. Other common techniques to permanently fasten the face to the tower body include ultra-sonic welding and non-removable snap fit fasteners.
[0040] In order to achieve all of the benefits of the multi-piece tower design, preferably temporary fasteners are used to couple the tower face to the tower body.
[0041] In addition to allowing either temporary or permanent fasteners to be used, it should be understood that the location of the fastener is not limited by the multi-piece design of the invention. For example, the fastener can be located within the tower body such as in the exemplary embodiment shown in
[0042] As noted above, the present invention is not limited to a specific type of fastener to couple the tower face to the tower body. Additionally, while the preferred embodiment utilizes separate face and tower body components, the invention is not limited to this joint location. For example, in a dual-sided tower configuration such as that shown in
[0043] In the embodiment shown in
[0044] It will be appreciated that the physical requirements placed on the hydroponic tower depend on the exact nature of its intended use. Some of the use characteristics that impact design requirements include (i) desired tower height, (ii) number of plants per unit length, (iii) expected plant size at maturity and prior to harvesting, (iv) expected weight per plant and corresponding container, (v) intended means used to transfer plants/containers into and out of the tower, (vi) water/nutrient delivery system, etc. The towers disclosed herein are designed to hold a minimum distributed load of 25 pounds over 200 inches for a single-sided tower, and a minimum distributed load of 50 pounds over 200 inches for a dual-sided tower. The fasteners used to attach the tower components together are designed to withstand a 25 pound shear load over a 200 inch length parallel to the front face, and a 45 pound point force perpendicular to the front face.
[0045] In general, the cross-section of the tower cavities disclosed herein are selected to be in the range of 1.5 inches by 1.5 inches to 3 inches by 3 inches, where the term tower cavity refers to the region within the body of the tower and behind the tower face. Thus a dual-sided tower such as that shown in
[0046] The strength of the tower depends on the specific tower design which, in large part, depends on the intended crop, the means used to plant and harvest, the intended water/nutrient delivery system, the desired tower-to-tower packing density, etc. As a general guideline, however, the inventors have found that in addition to providing increased packing density and a lower overall tower cost (based on cost per plant), the dual-sided tower has the added benefit of dramatically increasing tower stiffness. To achieve the same stiffness in a single-sided tower without altering wall thickness or cavity size, fins can be added to the tower as illustrated in
[0047] In at least one preferred embodiment, the side walls of the tower cavity are tapered. Tower cavity tapering is illustrated in the embodiments shown in
[0048] Towers 100 and 200 each utilize tower faces that are wider than the tower body. While this width difference is not required by the invention, it can provide several benefits. First, as previously noted, utilizing a wider tower face improves the tower strength relative to torsional loading about the tower's longitudinal axis. Second, the additional width can be used to mount tools to the tower, for example tools used during the insertion or removal of the plant containers, or tools used during harvesting. Third, the additional space next to the cut-outs simplifies the inclusion of indexing marks. The indexing marks, which may take the form of holes, indentations, dye marks, etc., provide a simple means of rapidly locating and identifying specific tower locations (e.g., cut-outs 103). Several of the figures show the indexing marks (see, for example, holes 1709 located on tower face 1705 shown in
[0049] The hydroponic towers of the present invention are not limited to a specific water/nutrient delivery system. Thus, for example, a wicking system may be implemented within the disclosed towers. The preferred embodiment, however, directs the water/nutrient mix towards the tower's rear inner surface where it can then flow downward, feeding the plants contained in the individual plant containers that are fit into each tower cut-out (e.g., cut-out 101). In order to help control water/nutrient flow along the back wall of the tower cavity, preferably a series of vertical ridges are fabricated onto the wall.
[0050] Systems and methods have been described in general terms as an aid to understanding details of the invention. In some instances, well-known structures, materials, and/or operations have not been specifically shown or described in detail to avoid obscuring aspects of the invention. In other instances, specific details have been given in order to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. One skilled in the relevant art will recognize that the invention may be embodied in other specific forms, for example to adapt to a particular system or apparatus or situation or material or component, without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. Therefore the disclosures and descriptions herein are intended to be illustrative, but not limiting, of the scope of the invention.