Air-assisted sprayers are widely used in orchards to ensure deep canopy penetration and effective pesticide coverage, yet excessive or misdirected airflow often causes spray drift and ground losses. This study evaluated spray deposition efficiency, drift, and environmental performance of a novel double-tower orchard sprayer (DIVENT) equipped with two independently driven axial fans allowing separate airflow adjustment on each side. Field experiments were conducted in apple orchards under crosswind conditions using the following three airflow emission scenarios (air volume to the LEFT/RIGHT side of sprayer): symmetrical (100%/100%), compensating crosswind (30%/100%), and one-sided (0%/100%). Measurements of spray deposition within the canopy, ground losses, and off-target deposition drift were performed using fluorescent tracer, and power consumption was recorded to estimate fuel use and CO2 emissions. The compensating airflow setting significantly improved spray targeting, reducing both in-orchard ground losses and off-target drift by up to 60%, while maintaining uniform canopy coverage comparable to the conventional symmetrical mode. The one-sided emission scenario achieved the highest drift reduction (67.8%) and the lowest power and CO2 emissions, though at the cost of reduced canopy deposition. Overall, the study demonstrates that independent fan control allows effective adaptation of spraying to weather and canopy conditions, providing substantial environmental and energy benefits without compromising spray efficiency.
Doruchowski et al. (Thu,) studied this question.