Particulate Matter Monitoring: Past, Present and Future
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Journal Title
International Journal of Earth & Environmental Sciences
ISSN
2456-351X
Volume
2
Issue
2
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Occhipinti, L., & Oluwasanya, P. (2017). Particulate Matter Monitoring: Past, Present and Future. International Journal of Earth & Environmental Sciences, 2 (2)https://doi.org/10.15344/2456-351x/2017/144
Abstract
The health problems caused by exposure to airborne Particulate Matter (PM) beyond safe limits have been
studied for many years. Government regulatory agencies have adapted and updated the safe exposure limits
as more progress is made both in policy developments and detection system design. Bulky PM detectors,
though very accurate do not provide sufficient spatial and temporal resolution, and are static and expensive.
Current much smaller commercial PM sensors are mobile but still mostly too expensive and largely still
too big for real-time continuous personal use. They also must be calibrated to convert their counts to mass
concentration despite their variation from unit to unit. The continuous drive towards having a cheaper,
smaller, yet more effective PM sensors for personal exposure analysis and indoor environments is pushing
the current boundaries of current techniques. Emerging PM sensing techniques must now achieve this, while
also linking to other structured source apportionment and semantic analysis of air quality data aimed at
providing useful information about user activities mostly provided via the internet. This review highlights
research on PM detection and monitoring, covering methods and principle of operation of detection
instruments, emerging trends and future outlooks. Further, this work reviews PM detection challenges,
measurement interpretation and possible solutions going forward.
Sponsorship
EPSRC (1629438)
EPSRC (1629438)
EPSRC (EP/K03099X/1)
Technology Strategy Board (103543)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.15344/2456-351x/2017/144
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/290879