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MichaelT17
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Homework Statement
I'm doing a personal project to keep me busy for the winter. I grow Bonsai and I'm making a hospital for sick trees or recently collected ones from the wild that need to recover. I have constructed a 40x40 inch plywood box, 5/8 inch thick walls, air tight. The lid will be made of an Acrylic sheet (not purchased yet) to let light in from the outside. It will be a sealed controlled environment inside. Co2, O2, humidity temp levels etc will be controlled and measured.
I am considering putting the box under pressure for an experiment so see if it effects growth and healing. I am no physicist, I spent 7 years as a machinist so I can build. However, advanced calculations are not my thing :) I do not want to pressurize anything without knowing if its safe, and I don't want to spend too much money. So if materials are to much cost to put it under 15 PSI I won't bother and just stick with controlled CO2 etc... I was thinking 15 PSI just to double atmospheric pressure (AP) and see the results...
My logic
if AP is 14.7 PSI at sea level to double the air available to the surface level of the foliage of a plant I woudl have to put my box at 14.7 PSI (or 15 to round up...) How much pressure can a 40x40" 5/8 plywood box with an acrylic lid actually hold... maybe I could try 7PSI and just up it by 50%...
My Math
My attempt at a math solution was 40"x40"= 1600 square inches 1600 x 15PSI= 24,000 lb or 12 tons... That seems like to much for my construction. But maybe those numbers are relative to something I'm not thinking about...
Should I even bother with this idea and stick to simply producing greater amounts of CO2 and o2 without pressure as a factor? When I worked in a shop 15 PSI was not much at all, if I didn't have a wife and kid I would just do it and see if it blows up (from far away ;) ). But now its best I do the responsible thing and ask someone and save a trip to the dog house hehe.
Thanks in advance.