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A Gap Analysis of Low-Cost Outdoor Air Quality Sensor In-Field Calibration

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TLDR
This article presents low-cost sensor technologies, and it survey and assess machine learning-based calibration techniques for their calibration, and presents open questions and directions for future research.
Abstract
In recent years, interest in monitoring air quality has been growing. Traditional environmental monitoring stations are very expensive, both to acquire and to maintain, therefore their deployment is generally very sparse. This is a problem when trying to generate air quality maps with a fine spatial resolution. Given the general interest in air quality monitoring, low-cost air quality sensors have become an active area of research and development. Low-cost air quality sensors can be deployed at a finer level of granularity than traditional monitoring stations. Furthermore, they can be portable and mobile. Low-cost air quality sensors, however, present some challenges: they suffer from crosssensitivities between different ambient pollutants; they can be affected by external factors such as traffic, weather changes, and human behavior; and their accuracy degrades over time. Some promising machine learning approaches can help us obtain highly accurate measurements with low-cost air quality sensors. In this article, we present low-cost sensor technologies, and we survey and assess machine learning-based calibration techniques for their calibration. We conclude by presenting open questions and directions for future research.

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Citations
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Applications of low-cost sensing technologies for air quality monitoring and exposure assessment: How far have they gone?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a comprehensive literature search including both the scientific and grey literature, and concluded that there is no clear answer to the question, due to a lack of: sensor/monitor manufacturers' quantitative specifications of performance, consensus regarding recommended end-use and associated minimal performance targets of these technologies, and the ability of the prospective users to formulate the requirements for their applications, or conditions of the intended use.
Journal ArticleDOI

From air quality sensors to sensor networks: Things we need to learn

TL;DR: In this paper, low-cost air quality sensors (LCAQS) can be deployed in dense monitoring networks to provide timely and comprehensive snapshots of pollutant concentrations and their spatial and temporal variability at various scales with relatively less cost and labor.
References
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A novel, low-cost, portable PID sensor for the detection of volatile organic compounds

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on the design, fabrication and verification of a portable, low-cost PID sensor, which provides two outputs: one that correlates to the total chemical components and a second that provides some level of compositional information.
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Performance of a scanning mobility particle sizer in measuring diverse types of airborne nanoparticles: Multi-walled carbon nanotubes, welding fumes, and titanium dioxide spray.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

MegaSense: Feasibility of Low-Cost Sensors for Pollution Hot-spot Detection

TL;DR: A 44-day measurement campaign is conducted to assess performance of low-cost air quality monitors under different environmental conditions and shows that the accuracy is sufficient for applications relying on variations in air quality index values, such as hot spot detection.
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