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USPTO: us-12648526 · published 2026-06-09 · patents · A01G 7/045· A01G 9/249· F21V 23/0457· F21V 23/0471· H05B 45/22· H05B 47/115· H05B 47/155· F21Y 2107/50

Three-dimensional plant growth lighting system

Pith reviewed 2026-06-10 04:02 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification patents A01G 7/045A01G 9/249F21V 23/0457F21V 23/0471H05B 45/22H05B 47/115H05B 47/155F21Y 2107/50
keywords plant growthlighting systemthree-dimensionalcontrollerlight formulascarbon dioxidesensorsgrowth chamber
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The pith

A plant growth system uses stored light formulas and sensor data to control lighting from top, sides, and bottom plus carbon dioxide supply.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The patent presents a three-dimensional lighting system for plants that includes lighting modules positioned above, beside, and below the growth chamber. A controller retrieves a species-specific light formula from a connected database and compares it against live readings from carbon dioxide, illuminance, and spectrum sensors. Based on that comparison the controller issues signals that adjust the lighting modules and a carbon dioxide generator. The design aims to deliver tailored, multi-angle illumination and gas levels inside the chamber without requiring constant manual intervention. If the formulas and comparisons work as described, the system could maintain consistent growing conditions across different plant types in a single automated setup.

Core claim

The patent claims a complete system in which top, lateral, and bottom lighting modules, a database of plant light formulas, a carbon dioxide generator with sensor, plus illuminance and spectrum sensors all connect to a single controller; the controller downloads the matching formula and uses the three sensor signals to generate control outputs that regulate any combination of the lighting modules and the carbon dioxide generator.

What carries the argument

The controller that downloads a plant-specific light formula from the database and compares it directly with the carbon dioxide concentration, illuminance, and spectrum signals to produce an intelligent control signal.

If this is right

  • Lighting can be supplied from three directions at once so that all surfaces of the plant receive illumination.
  • Carbon dioxide concentration can be raised or lowered in response to the difference between the formula and the current sensor reading.
  • The same hardware can serve multiple plant species simply by loading the corresponding formula from the database.
  • Real-time sensor feedback allows the system to respond to changes inside the chamber without external commands.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same comparison logic could be extended to additional sensors such as temperature or humidity if the database formulas were expanded.
  • Energy savings might result if the controller only activates modules when the formula indicates a deficit, though this is not stated in the patent.
  • The multi-directional lighting arrangement could be tested against single-direction systems to measure differences in plant morphology.

Load-bearing premise

The stored light formulas correctly describe the conditions each plant species needs, and the sensor readings can be compared to those formulas in a way that produces useful adjustments.

What would settle it

A controlled trial in which plants grown under the system's automatic adjustments show no measurable improvement in growth rate, biomass, or health compared with identical plants grown under fixed, non-adjusted lighting and carbon dioxide levels.

read the original abstract

1. A three-dimensional (3D) plant growth lighting system, comprising: a top lighting module disposed on a top of a plant chamber, wherein the plant chamber contains a plant; a lateral lighting module disposed on one side of the plant chamber; a bottom lighting module disposed on a bottom of the plant chamber; a controller connected to the top lighting module, the lateral lighting module and the bottom lighting module so as to control the top lighting module, the lateral lighting module and the bottom lighting module; a database connected to the controller and configured to save a plurality of light formulas corresponding to a plurality of plant species respectively; a carbon dioxide module connected to the controller, and comprising a carbon dioxide generator and a carbon dioxide sensor configured to detect a carbon dioxide concentration of the plant chamber and generate a carbon dioxide concentration signal; an illuminance sensor connected to the controller and configured to detect an illuminance of the plant chamber in order to generate an illuminance signal; and a spectrum sensor connected to the controller and configured to detect a spectrum of a light in the plant chamber so as to generate a spectrum signal; wherein the controller is configured to download the light formula corresponding to the plant from the database, and compare the light formula with the carbon dioxide concentration signal, the illuminance signal and the spectrum signal to generate an intelligent control signal so as to control one or more of the carbon dioxide generator, the top lighting module, the lateral lighting module and the bottom lighting module.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript describes a three-dimensional plant growth lighting system consisting of top, lateral, and bottom lighting modules, a controller, a database storing light formulas for multiple plant species, a CO2 module with generator and sensor, plus illuminance and spectrum sensors. The controller downloads the relevant light formula and compares it against the sensor signals to produce control outputs that adjust the lighting modules and CO2 generator.

Significance. If realized, the architecture could enable more uniform illumination and responsive environmental control in vertical or enclosed growing systems. The integration of multi-angle lighting with real-time sensor feedback and a plant-specific formula database is a coherent design concept, though its practical impact cannot be gauged without performance data.

minor comments (1)
  1. The entire manuscript is presented as a single unbroken claim sentence; breaking the description into numbered elements or adding a brief methods/implementation section would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for reviewing the patent application describing the three-dimensional plant growth lighting system. We address the key observation regarding practical impact below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: If realized, the architecture could enable more uniform illumination and responsive environmental control in vertical or enclosed growing systems. The integration of multi-angle lighting with real-time sensor feedback and a plant-specific formula database is a coherent design concept, though its practical impact cannot be gauged without performance data.

    Authors: The patent application discloses a novel system architecture comprising multi-directional (top, lateral, bottom) lighting modules, a controller, a species-specific light formula database, a CO2 module, and illuminance/spectrum sensors. The controller uses downloaded formulas to generate control signals based on real-time sensor inputs. As this is a patent document, its purpose is to protect the inventive concept and detailed system integration rather than to report empirical performance metrics. Such data would be appropriate for follow-on scientific publications but is not required for the patent disclosure of the architecture itself. revision: no

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No derivation chain or quantitative claims present

full rationale

The document is a patent that enumerates a system architecture consisting of lighting modules, sensors, a database of light formulas, and a controller that performs comparisons to generate control signals. No equations, derivations, predictions, fitted parameters, or first-principles results are stated anywhere in the text. The control logic is described purely as a functional specification without any reduction of outputs to inputs by construction or self-citation. As a result, there are no load-bearing steps to analyze for circularity.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

This document is a patent application describing an engineered system rather than a scientific claim resting on axioms or parameters. No free parameters, axioms, or invented entities are introduced in a scientific sense.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5858 in / 1031 out tokens · 58316 ms · 2026-06-10T04:02:59.050500+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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