Supporting conditions for CO2 enrichment

Dgringo69

Well-Known Member
Can anyone prove, disprove or elaborate on the red paragraph below? I have read some interesting info in my research for the proper temp/humidity in relation to CO2 levels for my indoor sealed grow. Now I am beginning to understand that my light intensity plays a role in CO2 absorption. Ideally I want to come to a very definite condition inside my grow space. The info below certainly depicts the high end of the envelope that you would not normally want to push. Is there a chart depicting the correlation of temp/RH/lumens per sqft/CO2ppm? The underlined sentence in the paragraph below really peaked my interest. Hope I haven't been wasting CO2..

Studies have shown optimal growth and yields at 90-95°F, 1,500 ppm CO2, 45-50% relative humidity, 7,500-10,000 lumens/square foot of light, and vigorous air movement both above and below the canopy. CO2 enrichment under 80°F, under 7500 lumens/sf, or above 50% humidity is not recommended because plants will not be conducting photosynthesis quickly enough to benefit from the enrichment.

Currently I have been running veg
76f
50-60rh
7650lumens/sqft
900ppm CO2

I have just bumped my numbers to..
82f
50/60rh
7650lumens/sqft
1000 ppm CO2

Am I on the right track with bumping up my temps when running CO2?
I really don't care to run over 1000pm so where should my temp and humidity be in veg and flower for that amount of enrichment?
 
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