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<div class="content-title"><a id="overview">OVERVIEW</a></div> | <div class="content-title"><a id="overview">OVERVIEW</a></div> | ||
+ | <p>The hardware components of this multidisciplinary project were designed and implemented using many engineering principles. After consulting various hydroponic farmers, researchers, and distributors, we were able to tailor our product to meet their specific needs. By using an iterative prototyping process, we modeled and tested our designs multiple times and received feedback to improve them each time. All the while, we aimed to develop an integrable system that can be easily utilized by our entire customer base. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
<p>Cornell iGEM’s OxyPonics system is designed to maximize the practical capabilities of our powerful biosensor using Wetlab’s engineered redox sensitive proteins. Focusing on industrial hydroponics, an industry critical to the future of food security and urban revitalization, we developed a system so that farmers could better control the environmental conditions crucial to their businesses. Our three-part system with bacteria, sensor, and Internet of Things (IoT) hardware integration allows farmers to optimize crop growth by manipulating a variable currently unheard of in the industry today: oxidative stress. Farmers currently control only for the pH and nutrient content of their water. OxyPonics adjusts water conditions to optimize levels of Oxidation-Reduction Potential (ORP) based on the crop variety and stage of growth. This allows for larger, healthier crops, and the ability for farmers to expand their operations and compete with traditional soil-based farms. Our dashboard takes in external sensor data and automatically generates alerts and reports, enabling farmers to track real time data on their facility. Through further testing and certification, the OxyPonics system has the potential to become an industry standard in hydroponics, much like current automated systems for pH and nutrient levels. | <p>Cornell iGEM’s OxyPonics system is designed to maximize the practical capabilities of our powerful biosensor using Wetlab’s engineered redox sensitive proteins. Focusing on industrial hydroponics, an industry critical to the future of food security and urban revitalization, we developed a system so that farmers could better control the environmental conditions crucial to their businesses. Our three-part system with bacteria, sensor, and Internet of Things (IoT) hardware integration allows farmers to optimize crop growth by manipulating a variable currently unheard of in the industry today: oxidative stress. Farmers currently control only for the pH and nutrient content of their water. OxyPonics adjusts water conditions to optimize levels of Oxidation-Reduction Potential (ORP) based on the crop variety and stage of growth. This allows for larger, healthier crops, and the ability for farmers to expand their operations and compete with traditional soil-based farms. Our dashboard takes in external sensor data and automatically generates alerts and reports, enabling farmers to track real time data on their facility. Through further testing and certification, the OxyPonics system has the potential to become an industry standard in hydroponics, much like current automated systems for pH and nutrient levels. | ||
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− | <img class="img-responsive" src="" alt="graphs"/> | + | <img class="img-responsive" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/2/26/T--Cornell--PDDesign.jpeg" alt="graphs"/> |
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<div class="content-title"><a id="components">COMPONENTS</a></div> | <div class="content-title"><a id="components">COMPONENTS</a></div> | ||
<p>OxyPonics mechanical product consist of three main components. The first component is a central housing box. All electrical mechanisms and motors that power OxyPonics’s data gathering-and-response system are contained inside the water-tight box. The housing uses epoxy and 3D printed constructs to safely enclose all dry components of the product. The second component is a rotating light module controlled by servos, which consists of two lights. One light shines a 448 nm wavelength of light to activate the fluorescent protein [3] and the other a 576 nm wavelength of light to activate pDawn and produce enzymes to breakdown the oxidative stress [4]. The third component of the redox sensor is the mounted camera. This camera measures the fluorescence emitted by the bacteria’s fluorescent protein and sends the appropriate amount of pDawn activating light. <u><b><a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Cornell/Software">Ratio-metric algorithms</a></b></u> use the camera’s readings to ensure the water surrounding a hydroponic plant stays at the optimal oxidative stress state. All three components can be attached to our designed railing system to minimize the number of cameras a hydroponic farmer may need. This railing system can capture real time data of each and every plant within an entire hydroponic bed. | <p>OxyPonics mechanical product consist of three main components. The first component is a central housing box. All electrical mechanisms and motors that power OxyPonics’s data gathering-and-response system are contained inside the water-tight box. The housing uses epoxy and 3D printed constructs to safely enclose all dry components of the product. The second component is a rotating light module controlled by servos, which consists of two lights. One light shines a 448 nm wavelength of light to activate the fluorescent protein [3] and the other a 576 nm wavelength of light to activate pDawn and produce enzymes to breakdown the oxidative stress [4]. The third component of the redox sensor is the mounted camera. This camera measures the fluorescence emitted by the bacteria’s fluorescent protein and sends the appropriate amount of pDawn activating light. <u><b><a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Cornell/Software">Ratio-metric algorithms</a></b></u> use the camera’s readings to ensure the water surrounding a hydroponic plant stays at the optimal oxidative stress state. All three components can be attached to our designed railing system to minimize the number of cameras a hydroponic farmer may need. This railing system can capture real time data of each and every plant within an entire hydroponic bed. | ||
</p> | </p> | ||
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<div class="content-title"><a id="fabrication">FABRICATION</a></div> | <div class="content-title"><a id="fabrication">FABRICATION</a></div> | ||
<p>We 3D printed several plastic models of the electronics housing, the camera mount, the servo mounts, and the Raspberry Pi mount using the Makerbot provided at Rev and the Rapid Prototyping Lab at Cornell University. The ArduCam 5 MP Mini Camera OV5647 1080p and light module were set up in the electronics housing. The waterproof box containing the electronic components of our product was machined by members of the team in the Emerson Lab at Cornell University. The box was designed to hold a piece of plexiglass on top to allow the fluorescence from the bacteria to reach the camera system and our wavelengths of light to activate the bacteria. All electronics and software were assembled and produced by the Product Development team. | <p>We 3D printed several plastic models of the electronics housing, the camera mount, the servo mounts, and the Raspberry Pi mount using the Makerbot provided at Rev and the Rapid Prototyping Lab at Cornell University. The ArduCam 5 MP Mini Camera OV5647 1080p and light module were set up in the electronics housing. The waterproof box containing the electronic components of our product was machined by members of the team in the Emerson Lab at Cornell University. The box was designed to hold a piece of plexiglass on top to allow the fluorescence from the bacteria to reach the camera system and our wavelengths of light to activate the bacteria. All electronics and software were assembled and produced by the Product Development team. | ||
</p> | </p> | ||
<div class="image-wrapper"> | <div class="image-wrapper"> | ||
− | <img class="img-responsive" src="" alt="graphs"/> | + | <img class="img-responsive" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/5/5e/T--Cornell--3Dprinter.jpeg" alt="graphs"/> |
+ | </div> | ||
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+ | <img class="img-responsive" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/8/8a/T--Cornell--RaspberryPi.jpeg" alt="graphs"/> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
<div class="content-title"><a id="references">REFERENCES</a></div> | <div class="content-title"><a id="references">REFERENCES</a></div> |
Revision as of 20:13, 27 October 2017
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