Hydroponic
Systems
Hydroponic systems are gardening mechanisms designed to bring a regular
or continuous flow of water and nutrients to the roots of a plant
without the use of soil. Normally, soil is the source for
both water and nutrients, but the soil itself is not required by any
plant. Hydroponic systems basically work without use of the
‘middleman’.
The term ‘hydroponics’ was coined by the UC Davis
professor, Gericke, in 1929. Though hydroponic systems had
been experimented with for many years prior, Professor Gericke was the
first to demonstrate that plants could be grown to full size without
using any soil. He came up with the word hydroponics as a
variation of the ancient Greek word for agriculture,
‘geoponics’.
Although there are hundreds of different hydroponic systems used today,
they all fall under seven basic categories; passive, water culture,
flood and drain, drip, wick, nutrient film technique, and
aeroponic.
The ‘passive’ hydroponic system is by far the
simplest. The plant is put in a growing medium of some kind,
usually perlite, rockwool, gravel or any other substance that has a
multitude of air pockets. The medium then sits in a tray of
nutrient solution, which is absorbed by the medium by the same simple
capillary actions that allow nutrients to flow through soil.
In ‘water culture’ hydroponic systems the plants
are suspended above the nutrient medium, and their roots dangle down
into it. So long as the nutrient solution is aerated, the
roots of any plant will absorb the need nutrients directly without
difficulty. Usually there is an air pump and air stone
involved to provide the nutrient solution with the needed oxygen.
The ‘flood and drain’ system has growth medium
bound plants sitting directly in a tray, as in the passive system,
which is then flooded at regular intervals with a nutrient
solution. There is usually an overflow tube which drains
excess solution back into a lower chamber, where the nutrient solution
is stored. This hydroponic system is also referred to as the
‘ebb and flow’ system.
Drip and wick hydroponic systems are both similar. In these
systems a continuous stream of nutrient solution is delivered to the
growth medium in which the plants are in. In the drip system,
the solution is dripped over the medium via a pump, and the wick system
relies on the capillary draw of a wick to bring in nutrients from a
lower reservoir.
The two most advanced hydroponic systems are the ‘nutrient
film technique’ (NFT) and ‘aeroponic’
systems. In NFT, the plants roots are suspended into a tray
in which a constant stream of nutrient solution is pumped
through. The tray is tilted, and the solution runs off back
into the reservoir from which it was pumped, never forming more than a
thing film along the bottom of the tray. Aeroponics uses a
pump that turns the nutrient solution into a fine mist or spray that
keeps the roots fed. In both NFT and Aeroponic systems, air
is usually the only growth medium.
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