The continuous decrease in the stratospheric ozone layer is producing an increase in ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B) reaching the surface of the earth; such an increase in UV-B radiation could produce effects on terrestrial biological processes. In this work a regulator to supply (in the field) additional doses of UV-B radiation, simulating the pattern of the solar ultraviolet radiation, is presented; the regulator set point is not a fixed value at which to maintain the controlled quantity, but rather a numerical coefficient which is used by the system to multiply a variable reference quantity (UV-B solar radiation). As a consequence, the actuator continually modulates the controlled quantity to maintain the ratio between this quantity and the reference quantity unaltered: the pantograph effect. Controlled and reference quantities are monitored by means of UV-B radiometers. Obviously, this principle can be applied to any physical quantity. The Automatically Modulated Irradiator (AMI) is made up of an array of lamps and the respective control which uniformly irradiate a surface with a radiative intensity which follows the intensity of natural UV-B radiation, multiplied by a numerical coefficient which is imposed by the user. In order to uniformly illuminate the surface, the irradiation diagram of lamp, inserted in their housings was specifically realized.
AMI: Automatically modulated Irradiator
Grifoni D;
2000
Abstract
The continuous decrease in the stratospheric ozone layer is producing an increase in ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B) reaching the surface of the earth; such an increase in UV-B radiation could produce effects on terrestrial biological processes. In this work a regulator to supply (in the field) additional doses of UV-B radiation, simulating the pattern of the solar ultraviolet radiation, is presented; the regulator set point is not a fixed value at which to maintain the controlled quantity, but rather a numerical coefficient which is used by the system to multiply a variable reference quantity (UV-B solar radiation). As a consequence, the actuator continually modulates the controlled quantity to maintain the ratio between this quantity and the reference quantity unaltered: the pantograph effect. Controlled and reference quantities are monitored by means of UV-B radiometers. Obviously, this principle can be applied to any physical quantity. The Automatically Modulated Irradiator (AMI) is made up of an array of lamps and the respective control which uniformly irradiate a surface with a radiative intensity which follows the intensity of natural UV-B radiation, multiplied by a numerical coefficient which is imposed by the user. In order to uniformly illuminate the surface, the irradiation diagram of lamp, inserted in their housings was specifically realized.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


