Calculate CO₂ supplementation needs for indoor grow rooms. Determine tank size, flow rate, and cost to reach optimal PPM levels for plant growth.
Carbon dioxide is the raw material of photosynthesis. While outdoor air contains approximately 420 PPM of CO₂, indoor grow rooms often drop below 300 PPM when plants are actively photosynthesizing, significantly limiting growth potential. Supplementing CO₂ to 800-1500 PPM can increase plant growth rates by 20-40% under strong lighting.
Effective CO₂ supplementation requires careful calculation. You need to know your room's volume, current ventilation rate, target PPM, and the leak rate to determine exactly how much CO₂ to inject and how long your tank will last. Too little supplementation wastes money without meaningful benefit; too much can stress plants and is simply vented away.
This calculator handles the complete CO₂ planning workflow for indoor growers. Enter your grow room dimensions, target PPM, and ventilation schedule, and it computes the required flow rate, daily CO₂ consumption, tank duration, and monthly cost. It accounts for room leakage, exhaust timing, and different CO₂ sources (compressed tanks, generators, or dry ice). Whether you're running a small grow tent or a commercial greenhouse, precise CO₂ management is essential for maximizing yield per square foot.
CO₂ supplementation is one of the highest-ROI investments in indoor growing, but only when applied correctly. This calculator prevents costly over- or under-supplementation by computing exact flow rates based on your specific room dimensions and ventilation setup. This co₂ grow room calculator helps you compare outcomes quickly and reduce avoidable mistakes when making day-to-day care decisions. Use the estimate as a planning baseline and confirm final decisions with a qualified professional when risk is high.
CO₂ volume (ft³) = Room Volume (ft³) × (Target PPM - Ambient PPM) / 1,000,000. Hourly CO₂ needed = Room Volume × (Target PPM / 1,000,000) × Air Exchanges/hr. CO₂ weight: 1 ft³ of CO₂ ≈ 0.1144 lbs at STP.
Result: 2.30 lbs CO₂/hour, 27.6 lbs/day
A 10×10×8 ft room (800 ft³) targeting 1200 PPM with 2 air exchanges/hour needs 800 × 1200/1M × 2 = 1.92 ft³/hr of CO₂, or about 2.30 lbs/hour. Over 12 hours that's 27.6 lbs per day.
Photosynthesis converts CO₂ and water into glucose and oxygen using light energy. The enzyme RuBisCO captures CO₂ in the Calvin cycle, and its efficiency increases with higher CO₂ concentrations up to a saturation point. At ambient 420 PPM, RuBisCO operates well below its maximum rate. Elevating CO₂ to 1000-1500 PPM pushes the enzyme closer to saturation, increasing the rate of carbon fixation and accelerating plant growth. This is why commercial greenhouses worldwide invest in CO₂ enrichment systems.
**Compressed CO₂ tanks** are the most common source for small to medium grow rooms. A standard 20 lb tank provides clean, controllable CO₂ and costs $15-25 to refill. **CO₂ generators** burn propane or natural gas to produce CO₂, along with heat and water vapor. They're cost-effective for large spaces but add thermal load. **Dry ice** sublimation is simple but hard to control and not recommended for precision growing. **Fermentation** (yeast + sugar) produces small amounts suitable only for very small enclosed spaces like propagation domes.
The key challenge in CO₂ management is balancing enrichment with ventilation. Plants need fresh air for temperature and humidity control, but every exhaust cycle dumps expensive CO₂ outside. The most effective strategy is **alternating mode**: run exhaust fans for 5-10 minutes to control temperature/humidity, then close vents and inject CO₂ to target PPM. Repeat throughout the light cycle. This approach can reduce CO₂ consumption by 40-60% compared to continuous injection against continuous ventilation.
Most plants show maximum benefit at 1000-1500 PPM. Below 800 PPM, the benefit is minimal. Above 1500 PPM, diminishing returns set in and some plants may show stress. CO₂ above 2000 PPM can be harmful to plants and dangerous to humans.
No. Plants only use CO₂ during photosynthesis, which requires light. Running CO₂ during lights-off wastes gas and money. Some growers turn CO₂ off 30 minutes before lights-off.
Yes. CO₂ above 5000 PPM (0.5%) can cause headaches and dizziness. Above 40,000 PPM (4%) it's immediately dangerous. Always have adequate ventilation and a CO₂ monitor with an alarm in enclosed grow spaces.
Tanks are clean and don't add heat, but need refilling. Generators (burning propane/natural gas) produce CO₂ plus heat and moisture, which may or may not be desirable. Small grow rooms favor tanks; large commercial operations often prefer generators.
Yes. CO₂ enrichment only helps if light intensity is the next limiting factor. Below ~600 PPFD, adding CO₂ shows little benefit. At 800-1200 PPFD, CO₂ supplementation shines.
Every air exchange replaces enriched air with ambient air, so more ventilation means more CO₂ consumption. Many growers alternate exhaust and CO₂ injection on timers rather than running both simultaneously.