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University of Kentucky

Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering Faculty Publications

2019

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Development And Preliminary Evaluation Of An Integrated Individual Nozzle Direct Injection And Carrier Flow Rate Control System For Pesticide Applications, Joe D. Luck, Scott A. Shearer, Michael P. Sama Jan 2019

Development And Preliminary Evaluation Of An Integrated Individual Nozzle Direct Injection And Carrier Flow Rate Control System For Pesticide Applications, Joe D. Luck, Scott A. Shearer, Michael P. Sama

Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering Faculty Publications

Direct injection systems for agricultural spray applications continue to present challenges in terms of commercialization and adoption by end users. Such systems have typically suffered from lag time and mixing uniformity issues, which have outweighed the potential benefits of keeping chemical and carrier separate or reducing improper tank-mixed concentration by eliminating operator measurements. The proposed system sought to combine high-pressure direct nozzle injection with an automated variable-flow nozzle to improve chemical mixing and response times. The specific objectives were to: (1) integrate a high-pressure direct nozzle injection system with variable-flow carrier control into a prototype for testing, (2) assess the …


Performance Validation Of A Multi-Channel Lidar Sensor: Assessing The Effects Of Target Height And Sensor Velocity On Measurement Error, Surya S. Dasika, Michael P. Sama, L. Felipe Pampolini, Christopher B. Good Jan 2019

Performance Validation Of A Multi-Channel Lidar Sensor: Assessing The Effects Of Target Height And Sensor Velocity On Measurement Error, Surya S. Dasika, Michael P. Sama, L. Felipe Pampolini, Christopher B. Good

Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering Faculty Publications

The objective of this study was to determine the effects of sensor velocity and target height above ground level on height measurement error when using a multi-channel LiDAR sensor. A linear motion system was developed to precisely control the dynamics of the LiDAR sensor in an effort to remove uncertainty in the LiDAR position and velocity while under motion. The linear motion system allowed the LiDAR to translate forward and backward in one direction parallel to the ground. A user control interface was developed to operate the system under different velocity profiles and to log LiDAR data synchronous to the …