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Characterising low-cost sensors in highly portable platforms to quantify personal exposure in diverse environments

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Chatzidiakou, Lia 
Popoola, Olalekan AM 
Kellaway, Mike 

Abstract

jats:p&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Abstract.&lt;/strong&gt; The inaccurate quantification of personal exposure to air pollution introduces error and bias in health estimations, severely limiting causal inference in epidemiological research worldwide. Rapid advancements in affordable, miniaturised air pollution sensor technologies offer the potential to address this limitation by capturing the high variability of personal exposure during daily life in large-scale studies with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. However, concerns remain regarding the suitability of novel sensing technologies for scientific and policy purposes. In this paper we characterise the performance of a portable personal air quality monitor (PAM) that integrates multiple miniaturised sensors for nitrogen oxides (NO&lt;sub&gt;x&lt;/sub&gt;), carbon monoxide (CO), ozone (O&lt;sub&gt;3&lt;/sub&gt;) and particulate matter (PM) measurements along with temperature, relative humidity, acceleration, noise and GPS sensors. Overall, the air pollution sensors showed excellent agreement with standard instrumentation in outdoor, indoor and commuting microenvironments across seasons and different geographical settings. An important outcome of this study is that the error of the PAM is significantly smaller than the error introduced when estimating personal exposure based on sparsely distributed outdoor fixed monitoring stations. Hence, novel sensing technologies as the ones demonstrated here can revolutionise health studies by providing highly resolved reliable exposure metrics at large scale to investigate the underlying mechanisms of the effects of air pollution on health.&lt;/p&gt; </jats:p>

Description

Keywords

37 Earth Sciences, 3701 Atmospheric Sciences, Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions, Bioengineering, Generic health relevance, 11 Sustainable Cities and Communities

Journal Title

Atmospheric Measurement Techniques

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1867-1381
1867-8548

Volume Title

Publisher

Copernicus Publications
Sponsorship
MRC (via King's College London) (unknown)
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/N007085/1)
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/I007490/1)