| Literature DB >> 35425017 |
Amruta Shelar1, Ajay Vikram Singh2, Paul Dietrich3, Romi Singh Maharjan2, Andreas Thissen3, Pravin N Didwal4, Manish Shinde5, Peter Laux2, Andreas Luch2, Vikas Mathe6, Timotheus Jahnke7, Manohar Chaskar8, Rajendra Patil9.
Abstract
Seeds are vulnerable to physical and biological stresses during the germination process. Seed priming strategies can alleviate such stresses. Seed priming is a technique of treating and drying seeds prior to germination in order to accelerate the metabolic process of germination. Multiple benefits are offered by seed priming techniques, such as reducing fertilizer use, accelerating seed germination, and inducing systemic resistance in plants, which are both cost-effective and eco-friendly. For seed priming, cold plasma (CP)-mediated priming could be an innovative alternative to synthetic chemical treatments. CP priming is an eco-friendly, safe and economical, yet relatively less explored technique towards the development of seed priming. In this review, we discussed in detail the application of CP technology for seed priming to enhance germination, the quality of seeds, and the production of crops in a sustainable manner. Additionally, the combination treatment of CP with nanoparticle (NP) priming is also discussed. The large numbers of parameters need to be monitored and optimized during CP treatment to achieve the desired priming results. Here, we discussed a new perspective of machine learning for modeling plasma treatment parameters in agriculture for the development of synergistic protocols for different types of seed priming. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35425017 PMCID: PMC8982346 DOI: 10.1039/d2ra00809b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1There are several challenges associated with seed germination, seeds have low water absorption, resulting in poor seed coat hydration and germination. Seed viability and vigor are compromised by long seed dormancy, seed-borne diseases and abiotic stress factors.
Fig. 2A schematic representation of the plasma exposure to seeds within various plasma reactors. (A) AAP is a plasma in which the pressure approximates that of the surrounding atmosphere. (B) DBD plasma can be generated at atmospheric pressure and (C) relatively high-density RF plasma generated under low-pressure conditions, (D) CD are electric discharges caused by ionization of air surrounding a conductor that carries a high voltage.
Fig. 3Different reactive species originate from gas plasma, both in the atmosphere and at the gas–liquid interfaces.
Examples of the relative concentrations of various charged and neutral species that are generated by CP in gas phase
| Plasma generated species | Chemical formula | Density (cm−3) |
|---|---|---|
| Superoxide radicals | O2˙− | 1010–1012 |
| Hydroxyl radicals | OH˙ | 1015–1017 |
| Hydrogen peroxide | H2O2 | 1014–1016 |
| Singlet oxygen | 1O2 | 1014–1016 |
| Ozone | O3 | 1015–1017 |
| Nitric oxide | NO | 1013–1014 |
| Electrons | e− | 109–1011 |
| Positive ions | M+ | 1010–1012 |
Fig. 4Timeline illustrating some of the important milestones of cold plasma technology execution in seed treatment to improve seed quality and crop productivity in the agriculture field ultimately leading to seed priming technology.
A collection of research publications regarding cold plasma–seed treatments
| No. | Seed type | Plasma treatment | Exposure time | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Broccoli | Corona discharge plasma jet; atm. pressure: air (voltage: 20 kV DC, frequency: 58 kHz) | 0–3 minutes (min) | Improved seed metabolism, reduced microbial load on seeds |
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| 2 | Cotton | DBD; atm. pressure; air, N2 (voltage: 19 kV, frequency: 1 kHz) | 3 min, 9 min, and 27 min | Improved seed coat for healthy germination |
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| 3 | Pepper & lentil | RF inductive; low pressure; air (frequency: 13.56 MHz; pressure 0.5 Torr; power: 18 W) | 60 seconds (s) | Improved seed coat for healthy germination |
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| 4 | Soybean | DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (voltage: 22.1 kV) | 12 s | Improved seed germination and seedling growth |
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| 5 | Barley | DBD; atm. pressure; N2 and air (plasma power: 400 W) | 0 to 80 s | Improved seed germination and plant growth |
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| 6 | Norway spruce | CCP RF; low pressure (60 Pa); air (frequency: 5.28 MHz, specific power of 0.35 W cm−1) | 5, 10, and 15 min | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 7 | Chili pepper | DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (voltage: 11 kV, frequency: 23 kHz) | 0, 60 and 120 s | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 8 | Wheat | DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (plasma power: 80 W) | 15 s, 30 s, 60 s, 90 s and 120 s | Improved wheat growth and salinity resistance |
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| 9 | Cucumber & pepper | DBD; atm. pressure; air (frequency: 15 kHz and power: 400 W) | 4 s for pepper, 20 s for cucumber | Improved seeds germination and reduced disease |
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| 10 | Tomato | DBD (fluidized); atm. pressure; air (voltage: 13–17 kV amplitude: 50 Hz) | 5, 15, 30 and 45 min | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 11 |
| (1) DBD; atm. pressure; air | 15 min | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| (2) Plasma jet; atm. pressure; He (voltage: 10 kV, frequency: 9.7 kHz) | |||||
| 12 | Sunflower | Plasma flashlight; atm. pressure Ar, O2 (voltage: 8, 10, 12, and 14 kV) | 1, 3, and 5 min | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 13 |
| RF; low pressure (20–80 Pa); O2, Ar (frequency: 13.56 MHz, power: 60 W) | — | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 14 |
| Gliding arc; atm. pressure; N2 (voltage: 3.7 kV, frequency: 17 kHz) | 1, 2, 5, 10 and 15 minutes | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 15 | Wheat | DBD; low pressure (10 Torr); air, Ar, O2 (voltage: 5–10 kV, frequency: 3–8 kHz) | — | Modified seed coat, improved seed germination and growth |
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| 16 | Pea & zucchini | Gliding arc; atm. pressure; air | 30 and 60 s | Improved seed germination |
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| 17 | Maize, peppers, wheat, soybeans, tomatoes, eggplants, pumpkins | CCP glow RF; low pressure (30–200 Pa); air, He (frequency: 13.56 MHz, power: 50–1000 W) | 5–90 s | Improved seed germination |
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| 18 | Coffee and grape seeds | DBD; atm. pressure; He (frequency: 10 kHz) | 30 s, 60 s, 120 s and 240 s | Improved seed germination |
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| 19 | Artichoke | CCP RF; low pressure; N2 (plasma power: 10 W) | 3, 10, and 15 min | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 20 | Tomato | ICCP RF; low pressure (150 Pa); He (frequency: 13.56 MHz) | 15 s | Improved seed germination |
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| 21 |
| RF; low pressure (800 mTorr); N2, O2 (frequency: 13.56 MHz, plasma power: 50 W) | 1, 15 and 30 min | Improved seed germination |
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| 22 | Wheat | RF capacitive; low pressure; Ar (voltages: 200–800, frequency: 13.56 MHz) | 1–8 min | Improved seed germination, pesticidal effect against red flour beetles |
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| 23 | Wheat | DBD; low pressure (10 Torr); air, Ar, O2 (voltage: 5–10 kV, frequency: 3–8 kHz) | 90 s | Reduced toxicity of cadmium. Improved seed germination |
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| 24 |
| DBD; low pressure (10 Torr); air, Ar, O2 (voltage: 3–6 kV, frequency: 3–10 kHz) | — | Improved metabolism |
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| 25 | Wheat | Not clear; low pressure; Ar (voltage: 800 V, frequency: 10 Hz) | 1–4 min | Improved seed germination and seed sterilization |
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| 26 | Basil | RF; low pressure; (0.40 mbar) O2 and Ar (frequency: 13.56 MHz, power: 300 W) | 10 min | Improved seed growth and seedling establishment |
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| 27 |
| DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 10 kV frequency: 10 kHz) | — | Improved seed germination and salinity resistance |
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| 28 | Wheat | Plasma jet; atm. pressure; N2 (frequency: 20 kHz, voltage: 2.6 kV) | 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 min | Improved water uptake and germination |
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| 29 |
| DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (voltage: 10 kV, frequency: 13 kHz) | 0, 50 or 90 s | Synergistic effect of cold plasma and nanoparticles to improve seed germination |
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| 30 | Soybean | Needle to plane DBD; atm. pressure; N2, O2 (voltage: 25 kV, frequency: 50 Hz) | 60 to 180 s | Improved seed germination and yield |
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| 31 |
| DBD; atm. pressure; Ar | 0, 30, 60, and 90 s | Improved seed germination, physiology and growth |
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| 32 | Wheat | DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 80 kV, frequency: 50 Hz) | 30, 60, or 180 s | Improved seed germination and seed surface chemistry |
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| 33 | Radish, mung bean, wheat, tomato, lettuce, mustard, | DBD jet; atm. pressure; N2, O2, air (voltage: 0–18 kV, frequency: 500 Hz) | — | Improved seed germination |
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| 34 |
| DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 8.47 kV, frequency: 7.95 kHz) | 0.5, 1, and 3 min | Improved seed germination |
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| 35 | Pine | DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 10 kV, frequency: 14 kHz) | 5, 10, 60, 180, and 300 s | Improved seed growth and sterilization of seeds |
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| 36 | Sunflower | CCP RF; low pressure (200 Pa); air (voltage: 17.96 kV, frequency: 5.28 MHz) | 2, 5, and 7 m | Improved seed germination and seedling development |
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| 37 | Pea | DBD; atm. pressure; air (plasma power: 15 W) | 1–10 min | Improved seed growth |
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| 38 | Bitter melon | DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (voltage: 10 kV, frequency: 13 kHz) | 0, 60, and 120 s | Improved seed germination, growth and yield |
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| 39 | Basil | DBD; atm. pressure; air | 30 s and 3 m | Improved seed germination and seedling development |
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| 40 |
| RF; low pressure; Ar (frequency: 13.56 MHz, power: 0–200 W) | 1, 5, 10, and 15 min | Improved seed germination and growth |
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| 41 |
| DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 6 kV and frequency: 20 kHz) | 2, 5, 10, 15, or 20 s | Improved seed germination and growth |
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| 42 | Maize, wheat, lupine | CCP RF; low pressure (200 Pa); air (frequency: 5.28 MHz) | 2, 4, 5 and 7 min | Improved seed growth and sterilization of seeds |
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| 43 | Grape cultivar Muscat of Alexandria | DBD; atm. pressure; He and O2 (plasma power: 30 W) | 2, 5 and 10 min | Improved seed germination and growth |
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| 44 |
| DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (power: 80 W; voltage: 10 kV frequency: 13 kHz) | 0, 30, 60, and 90 s | Improved seed germination and seedling growth |
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| 45 | Radish | DBD; atm. pressure; humid air (frequency: 14.4 kHz) | 3 min | Modified seed coat, improved seed germination and growth |
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| 46 | Hyssop | Not clear; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 23 kV) | 1, 5, and 10 min | Tissue modification |
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| 47 | Black gram | DBD; low pressure (400 Torr); air (voltage: 5 kV, frequency: 4.5 kHz) | 20 to 180 s | Modified seed coat, improved seed germination and growth |
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| 48 | Rice | (1) Arc discharge; low or atm. pressure; underwater | 10–30 min | Improved seed germination and disease resistance |
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| (2) DBD; low and atm. pressure; (0.6–1 atm); not clear (frequency: 12 Hz) | |||||
| 49 | Hemp | DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (frequency: 13 kHz; power: 80 W) | 0, 40, and 80 s | Improved seed germination |
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| 50 |
| DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 7 V, frequency: 500 Hz) | — | Improved seed germination |
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| 51 | Coriander | (1) DBD; atm. pressure; Ar, N2, air | 30 s, 1 and 3 min | Improved seed germination and development |
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| (2) Microwave plasma torch for NO; N2, O2 (frequency: 15.4 kHz, power: 400 W) | |||||
| 52 | Clover | Not clear; not clear; not clear (plasma power: 20–280 W) | — | Improved seed germination and seed growth |
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| 53 | Pea | DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 10 kV, frequency: 14 kHz) | 60 to 600 s | Improved seed germination and metabolism |
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| 54 | Wheat | DBD; atm. pressure; air (frequency: 50 Hz) | 5, 15, 30 min | Improved seed germination and early growth |
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| 55 | Radish | DBD; atm. pressure; air, O2, NO, He, Ar, N2 (voltage: 9.2 kV, frequency: 10 kHz) | 3 min | Improved seed growth |
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| 56 | Radish | Plasma flashlight; atm. pressure; Ar (voltage: 0–30 kV) | 2, 4 and 6 min | Improved seed germination |
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| 57 | Ajwain | CCP RF; low pressure; air (plasma power: 50 W) | 2 min | Improved seed germination |
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| 58 | Peanut | CCP RF; low pressure (150 Pa); He (frequency: 13.56 MHz, power: 60–140 W) | 15 s | Improved seed germination, growth and yield |
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| 59 | Rice | Hybrid microcorona discharge; atm. pressure; air, Ar; (frequency: 700 Hz) | ∼1 min | Improved seed germination and disease resistance |
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| 60 | Mung bean | Plasma jet array; atm. pressure; He, N2, air, O2 (voltage: 0–20 kV frequency: 9.0 kHz) | 3 min | Improving seed germination and seedling growth |
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| 61 | Wheat | DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 20 kV, frequency: 14 kHz) | 10–600 s | Improved seed germination and disease resistance |
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| 62 | Mulungu | Plasma jet DBD; atm. pressure; He (voltage: 10 kV, frequency: 750 Hz, power: 150 W) | 60 s | Modification of seed coat, improved seed germination |
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| 63 | Bell pepper | Glow discharge; low pressure (0.2 mbar); O2 | 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 min | Seed coat modification, growth parameters |
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| 64 | Wheat | DBD; atm. pressure; air, Ar, O2, N2 (voltage: 13.0 kV, frequency: 50 Hz) | 2 min | Improved seed germination and seedling growth |
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| 65 | Mimosa | DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 17.5 kV, frequency of 990 Hz) | 3, 9 and 15 min | Increased wettability and seed germination |
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| 66 | Soybean | Needle to plane DBD; atm. pressure; Ar (voltage: 22.1 kV, frequency: 60 Hz) | 12 s | Improved seed growth and seed metabolism |
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| 67 | Wheat | DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 0–50 kV, frequency of 50 Hz) | 4 min | Improved seed germination and drought resistance |
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| 68 | Quinoa | (1) DBD; low pressure (500 mbar); dry air | 15 min | Improved seed germination |
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| (2) RF; low pressure (0.1 mbar); dry air (voltage: 8.2 kV, frequency: 1 kHz) | |||||
| 69 | Radish | Corona discharge plasma jet; atm. pressure air (voltage: 20 kV, frequency: 58 kHz) | 2 min | Improved seed germination and disease resistance |
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| 70 | Rapeseed | Corona discharge plasma jet; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 20 kV, frequency: 58 kHz) | 3 min | Improved seed germination and disease resistance |
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| 71 | Cultivars of hemp | (1) Gliding arc; atm. pressure; humid air | 0, 180, 300 and 600 s | Improved seed treatment |
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| (2) Microwave plasma discharge; low pressure (140 Pa); Ar, O2 (frequency 50 Hz) | |||||
| 72 | Wheat | DBD; atm. pressure; air (voltage: 0–50 kV, frequency: 50 Hz) | 0, 1, 4, 7, 10, and 13 min | Improved seed germination and growth |
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| 73 | Purple coneflower | CCP RF; low pressure (60 Pa); air (frequency: 5.28 MHz) | 2–7 min | Growth parameters |
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The cold plasma treatment of seeds as described in the patent literature
| No. | Inventors | Patent year | Patent registration no. | Title of patent | Description of invention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Yuanhua Dong | 2018 | US20150327430A1US20150327430A1 | Cold plasma seed treatment device | The present invention belongs to the cold plasma seed treatment field, and particularly relates to a cold plasma seed treatment device |
| 2 | Ferencz S. Denes | 2000 | WO2014086129A1 | Cold-plasma treatment of seeds to remove surface materials | Plasma processing of materials and particularly to plasma treatment of seeds |
| 3 | Edward Bormashenko | 2013 | WO2013168038A1 | Processing seeds by cold plasma treatment to reduce an apparent contact angle of seeds coat surface methods | Methods for reduction on apparent contact angle of seeds coat surface by cold plasma treatment, agricultural devices for said treatment and seeds obtained by methods thereof |
Fig. 5Schematic illustrating the effect of the combination of nanoparticles and cold plasma treatments on seed priming at the molecule level. As a result, cold plasma infusions improve the physiological processes and pathogen inactivation by enhancing antioxidant enzyme systems in seeds treated with nanoscale particles and boosting the response to defense stimuli (CAT: catalase, APX: ascorbate peroxidase, SOD: superoxide dismutases, IAA: indole-3-acetic acid, GA: gibberellic acid, ABA: abscisic acid).
Fig. 6Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (NOS) generation by cold plasma at atmospheric or low pressure consequently affects seed germinating parameters, physiology, biochemical and molecular processes that are critical to germination, growth, and sustainability.
Fig. 7Machine learning application for the CP mediated seed priming technology. With a machine-learning algorithm, it becomes possible to predict the best parameters for the cold plasma treatment and their effects on seed priming. The machine learning models allow the development of stronger and more efficient treatment protocols for germination and vigor improvement for different types of seeds.
Machine learning methods and their description for real-time CP diagnostics
| No. | ML methods | Description | Visualization |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Linear regression | Supervised linear model |
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| 2 |
| An unsupervised method that groups data into groups or clusters. A cluster is defined by the location of its center point, also called a centroid. |
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| 3 | Gaussian process (GP) regression | In GP regression, a nonparametric method of machine learning is used rather than a parametric one. A joint Gaussian distribution is assumed in GP regression models. GP regression provides confidence bounds on the model predictions by predicting a variance associated with expected value. This variance is identified in the model predictions |
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