Drones (Aug 2022)

A Wind-Tunnel Assessment of Parameters That May Impact Spray Drift during UAV Pesticide Application

  • Shanique Grant,
  • Jeff Perine,
  • Farah Abi-Akar,
  • Timothy Lane,
  • Brenna Kent,
  • Christopher Mohler,
  • Chris Scott,
  • Amy Ritter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/drones6080204
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 8
p. 204

Abstract

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The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of varying wind speeds (1.5, 3.0, and 4.5 m/s), initial payload volumes (2 and 10 L), and nozzle droplet size characteristics (fine, medium, coarse) on drift during spray applications from an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) hovering freely in a wind tunnel. Along the length of the wind tunnel, glass slides were used to collect spray droplets at 14 points distributed in upwind, in-swath, and downwind distances. Analysis of the results showed that there are distinguishable shifts of up to 2 m in-swath as wind speed increases. Downwind of the UAV, a regression of the combined variables indicated that tunnel wind speed changed deposition the most overall, followed by nozzle/droplet size. Initial payload volume was less impactful. Overall, faster wind speeds, finer droplet sizes, and a heavier initial payload were associated with more drift on average. Wind directions and speeds were also measured on a finer scale of tunnel locations to record airflow pattern variability especially closer to the UAV. These findings may provide guidance to regulators and applicators to identify operating conditions for UAVs that limit off-target movement during applications.

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