Vegetable Production in PFALs: Control of Micro-Environmental Factors, Principal Components and Automated Systems

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Abstract

Plant factories with artificial lighting (PFALs) are indoor crop production systems aiming at the growth of high-value products in terms of yield and quality, while maximizing resource use efficiency. The emergence of PFALs opened a new world for crop production and offered an option to tackle problems related to climate change, land availability, and urban/peri-urban farming. This was made possible upon major technological advancements and extensive research in the field of controlled environment agriculture, which paved the way for the establishment of such cost-efficient and climate-unaffected modules of vegetable and other crops’ production. In the present review, we have examined the recent research achievements regarding the micro-environmental factors, the principal components, as well as the automated systems used for plant production in PFALs. Ultimately, we provide the reader with a number of future perspectives that can be considered for indoors cultivation in the following years.

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Bantis, F., Chatzigeorgiou, I., Sismanis, M., Ntinas, G. K., & Koukounaras, A. (2024, April 1). Vegetable Production in PFALs: Control of Micro-Environmental Factors, Principal Components and Automated Systems. Agriculture (Switzerland). Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI). https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14040642

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