Abstract
Root zone cooling technique has become an alternative cultivation method for temperate crops production in the tropics instead of cooling the aerial environment of the greenhouse. In this experiment, the root zone cooling system was incorporated with a multi-tier crop cultivation structure. This structure consisted of five tiers arranged in an A-shape design and was placed under an open rain shelter, thus, left it to undergo fluctuating environment temperature. There were five pillow polybags inserted with cocopeat and were placed on the structure. Each pillow polybag consisted of a single pipe that was buried inside the growth media located near the root zone area. This pipe that was connected to the chilled system acted as a cooling agent in controlling the growth media temperature. The objective of the study was to evaluate the Root Zone Cooling (RZC) system performance in distributing and controlling water-dissolved nutrient temperatures to meet crop-root requirement needs. From the experiment conducted, it was found that there was no significant difference between root zone temperature at different levels and lengths on multi-tier structure. The chilling pipes was able to distribute the temperatures to meet crop-root requirement needs along the multi-tier structure.
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