DIY Builds
Photo: Tri Hua
Greenhouses Trap Heat and Light. Plants need light, warm temperatures, air, water, and nutrients to survive and grow. Different plants have different requirements for each of these necessities. A greenhouse works by providing the first two requirements for your plants, but the last three are up to you.
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Learn More »A greenhouse can help increase plant growth and fruit production and even allow you to grow plants that wouldn't normally survive in your climate. Understanding how the process works can help you to get the most out of your greenhouse. Greenhouses Trap Heat and Light Plants need light, warm temperatures, air, water, and nutrients to survive and grow. Different plants have different requirements for each of these necessities. A greenhouse works by providing the first two requirements for your plants, but the last three are up to you. Related Articles 20 Careers With Plants to Consider If You Have a Green Thumb Step 1: Light Comes In In order to provide light, greenhouses need to have some way for the light to come in. This is why greenhouses are made of mostly translucent materials, like glass or clear plastic. This gives the plants inside maximum access to sunlight. Step 2: Heat Is Absorbed When the light comes in the glass walls of the greenhouse, it is absorbed by the plants, ground and anything else in the greenhouse, converting it to infrared energy (aka heat) in the process. The darker the surface, the more energy it can absorb and turn into heat. This is why black pavement gets really hot in the summer. It's absorbing a lot of heat. Step 3: Heat Gets Trapped Once the light energy gets converted into infrared energy (heat), it has a different "shape" than light energy - what scientists refer to as wavelength. The change in the wavelength makes it so that the heat can't easily escape out of the greenhouse's glass walls. So while getting in was easy, getting out is harder. Step 4: Warming the Greenhouse The trapped heat warms the air inside the greenhouse and because a greenhouse is relatively air-tight, the warmer air stays inside, raising the entire building's temperature. This is the same effect that you've no doubt experienced when getting into a car after it's been sitting in a sunny parking space for a few hours. It is nice and toasty. Step 5: Staying Warm With sufficient sunlight, the temperature inside a greenhouse may become much higher than the outdoor temperature; in fact, on a hot sunny day you may need to ventilate the greenhouse all day to keep from literally cooking the plants inside. On overcast days, less sunlight means that the greenhouse will heat up more slowly, if at all. For that reason, greenhouses are most useful in areas that have plenty of sun.
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Learn More »Step 6: Promoting Photosynthesis All this light and warm temperatures give plants ample access to the sunlight and temperatures need to grow. This is because they have the right conditions for photosynthesis to occur. Photosynthesis is the combining of carbon dioxide from the air and energy from sunlight to make simple sugars, which the plant then uses as food. You might use a cheeseburger to get big and strong, well a plant uses the sun. On average, plants need about six hours of sunlight per day, although this varies depending on the type of plant; placing your greenhouse where it will get full sun all day will ensure that the plants inside get enough light. When There's No Sun The plastic or glass that makes up most of a greenhouse's exterior is great for letting in the maximum amount of light, but it's a poor insulator (it doesn't hold heat well). This means the heat energy travels though it eventually to escape to the outside world. As long as the sun is shining this doesn't matter because light energy comes in faster than the heat can get out. But at night, all that heat energy will quickly leave, which will leave your plants at the mercy of lower nighttime temperatures. In order to protect your tender plants, you need to either store excess heat during the day or use an artificial heat source at night. Storing Heat During the Day Different materials take different amounts of energy to heat up (bricks take longer to get warm than dirt or gravel), a characteristic known as thermal mass. The higher a material's density, or how packed together it is, the more energy it takes to raise the temperature of that material. So, high density materials can store a lot of heat. Examples of high-density materials include: Stone
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