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Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment

The Arctic is an important natural laboratory that is extremely sensitive to climatic changes and its monitoring is, therefore, of great importance. Due to the environmental extremes it is often hard to deploy sensors and observations are limited to a few sparse observation points limiting the spati...

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Autores principales: Carotenuto, Federico, Brilli, Lorenzo, Gioli, Beniamino, Gualtieri, Giovanni, Vagnoli, Carolina, Mazzola, Mauro, Viola, Angelo Pietro, Vitale, Vito, Severi, Mirko, Traversi, Rita, Zaldei, Alessandro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7180591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32235527
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20071919
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author Carotenuto, Federico
Brilli, Lorenzo
Gioli, Beniamino
Gualtieri, Giovanni
Vagnoli, Carolina
Mazzola, Mauro
Viola, Angelo Pietro
Vitale, Vito
Severi, Mirko
Traversi, Rita
Zaldei, Alessandro
author_facet Carotenuto, Federico
Brilli, Lorenzo
Gioli, Beniamino
Gualtieri, Giovanni
Vagnoli, Carolina
Mazzola, Mauro
Viola, Angelo Pietro
Vitale, Vito
Severi, Mirko
Traversi, Rita
Zaldei, Alessandro
author_sort Carotenuto, Federico
collection PubMed
description The Arctic is an important natural laboratory that is extremely sensitive to climatic changes and its monitoring is, therefore, of great importance. Due to the environmental extremes it is often hard to deploy sensors and observations are limited to a few sparse observation points limiting the spatial and temporal coverage of the Arctic measurement. Given these constraints the possibility of deploying a rugged network of low-cost sensors remains an interesting and convenient option. The present work validates for the first time a low-cost sensor array (AIRQino) for monitoring basic meteorological parameters and atmospheric composition in the Arctic (air temperature, relative humidity, particulate matter, and CO(2)). AIRQino was deployed for one year in the Svalbard archipelago and its outputs compared with reference sensors. Results show good agreement with the reference meteorological parameters (air temperature (T) and relative humidity (RH)) with correlation coefficients above 0.8 and small absolute errors (≈1 °C for temperature and ≈6% for RH). Particulate matter (PM) low-cost sensors show a good linearity (r(2) ≈ 0.8) and small absolute errors for both PM(2.5) and PM(10) (≈1 µg m(−3) for PM(2.5) and ≈3 µg m(−3) for PM(10)), while overall accuracy is impacted both by the unknown composition of the local aerosol, and by high humidity conditions likely generating hygroscopic effects. CO(2) exhibits a satisfying agreement with r(2) around 0.70 and an absolute error of ≈23 mg m(−3). Overall these results, coupled with an excellent data coverage and scarce need of maintenance make the AIRQino or similar devices integrations an interesting tool for future extended sensor networks also in the Arctic environment.
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spelling pubmed-71805912020-05-01 Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment Carotenuto, Federico Brilli, Lorenzo Gioli, Beniamino Gualtieri, Giovanni Vagnoli, Carolina Mazzola, Mauro Viola, Angelo Pietro Vitale, Vito Severi, Mirko Traversi, Rita Zaldei, Alessandro Sensors (Basel) Article The Arctic is an important natural laboratory that is extremely sensitive to climatic changes and its monitoring is, therefore, of great importance. Due to the environmental extremes it is often hard to deploy sensors and observations are limited to a few sparse observation points limiting the spatial and temporal coverage of the Arctic measurement. Given these constraints the possibility of deploying a rugged network of low-cost sensors remains an interesting and convenient option. The present work validates for the first time a low-cost sensor array (AIRQino) for monitoring basic meteorological parameters and atmospheric composition in the Arctic (air temperature, relative humidity, particulate matter, and CO(2)). AIRQino was deployed for one year in the Svalbard archipelago and its outputs compared with reference sensors. Results show good agreement with the reference meteorological parameters (air temperature (T) and relative humidity (RH)) with correlation coefficients above 0.8 and small absolute errors (≈1 °C for temperature and ≈6% for RH). Particulate matter (PM) low-cost sensors show a good linearity (r(2) ≈ 0.8) and small absolute errors for both PM(2.5) and PM(10) (≈1 µg m(−3) for PM(2.5) and ≈3 µg m(−3) for PM(10)), while overall accuracy is impacted both by the unknown composition of the local aerosol, and by high humidity conditions likely generating hygroscopic effects. CO(2) exhibits a satisfying agreement with r(2) around 0.70 and an absolute error of ≈23 mg m(−3). Overall these results, coupled with an excellent data coverage and scarce need of maintenance make the AIRQino or similar devices integrations an interesting tool for future extended sensor networks also in the Arctic environment. MDPI 2020-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7180591/ /pubmed/32235527 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20071919 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Carotenuto, Federico
Brilli, Lorenzo
Gioli, Beniamino
Gualtieri, Giovanni
Vagnoli, Carolina
Mazzola, Mauro
Viola, Angelo Pietro
Vitale, Vito
Severi, Mirko
Traversi, Rita
Zaldei, Alessandro
Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment
title Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment
title_full Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment
title_fullStr Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment
title_full_unstemmed Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment
title_short Long-Term Performance Assessment of Low-Cost Atmospheric Sensors in the Arctic Environment
title_sort long-term performance assessment of low-cost atmospheric sensors in the arctic environment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7180591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32235527
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20071919
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