LEDs grow; Pulsed lighting with LEDs
September 2004
"However, from literature the hypothesis was made that photosynthesis and thus the growth of plants under pulsed light can only approach, but never exceed photosynthesis and thus growth under continuous light with the same daily light integral under identical environmental conditions.
To test this hypothesis an experiment was set-up where Lemna plants where grown in the same environment, 21 °C, 60% RH and a photoperiod of 16 hours, with the same daily light integral, 11.52 mol m-2 day-1, but different light sources providing this daily light integral. One treatment consisted of fluorescent tubes, which provided a light intensity of 200 µmol m-2 s-1, another treatment that consisted of 24 LEDs spread out over 300 cm2 that provided light over an area of 500 cm2 , this treatment also had a light intensity of 200 µmol m-2 s-1. The last treatment provided light in pulses and consisted of 48 LEDs spread out over 300 cm2 to light an area of 500 cm2 , where the ‘on’- signal was 400 µmol m-2 s-1 and the ‘off’-signal was 0 µmol m-2 s-1. With these light sources six experiments were set-up, where the frequency of the pulsed light ranged from 0.012 Hz till 120 Hz, with a difference of a factor ten between the experiments. These frequencies also were used to name the experiments in some graphs. The results of these experiments where not as expected, in that different effects occurred over the range of frequencies. At 1.28 Hz the area growth rate of the plants was higher than that of the control treatment, and there also was a higher leaf area ratio (LAR). However, at 0.012 and 0.12 Hz a higher relative area growth rate is combined with a lower LAR. At 12 and 120 Hz the relative area growth rate is equal to the control treatment, at 12 Hz the LAR is also equal, but at 120 Hz the LAR is much lower. The final conclusion reached from these data is that it is possible to grow plants under pulsed red LEDs, however some morphological features of the plants change, furthermore most of the time it is not beneficial to grow plants under the pulsed light, certainly not below a frequency of 1 Hz."