A sensor network based on 10 stationary nodes distributed in Bari (Southern Italy) has been deployed for urban air quality (AQ) monitoring. The low-cost sensor systems have been installed in specific sites (e.g., buildings, offices, schools, streets, ports, and airports) to enhance environmental awareness of the citizens and to supplement the expensive official air-monitoring stations with cost-effective sensor nodes at high spatial and temporal resolution. Continuous measurements were performed by low-cost electrochemical gas sensors (CO, NO2, O3), optical particle counter (PM10), and NDIR infrared sensor (CO2), including micro-sensors for temperature and relative humidity. The sensors are operated to assess the performance during a campaign (July 2015–December 2017) of several months for citizen science in sustainable smart cities. Typical values of CO2, measured by distributed nodes, varied from 312 to 494 ppm (2016), and from 371 to 527 ppm (2017), depending on seasonal micro-climate change and site-specific conditions. The results of the AQ-monitoring long-term campaign for selected sensor nodes are presented with a relative error of 26.2% (PM10), 21.7% (O3), 25.5% (NO2), and 79.4% (CO). These interesting results suggest a partial compliance, excluding CO, with Data Quality Objectives (DQO) by the European Air Quality Directive (2008/50/EC) for Indicative (Informative) Measurements.

Networked Low-Cost Sensor Systems for Urban Air Quality Monitoring: A Long-Term Use-Case in Bari (Italy)

Penza M.;Suriano D.;Pfister V.;Dipinto S.;Prato M.;Cassano G.
2025-01-01

Abstract

A sensor network based on 10 stationary nodes distributed in Bari (Southern Italy) has been deployed for urban air quality (AQ) monitoring. The low-cost sensor systems have been installed in specific sites (e.g., buildings, offices, schools, streets, ports, and airports) to enhance environmental awareness of the citizens and to supplement the expensive official air-monitoring stations with cost-effective sensor nodes at high spatial and temporal resolution. Continuous measurements were performed by low-cost electrochemical gas sensors (CO, NO2, O3), optical particle counter (PM10), and NDIR infrared sensor (CO2), including micro-sensors for temperature and relative humidity. The sensors are operated to assess the performance during a campaign (July 2015–December 2017) of several months for citizen science in sustainable smart cities. Typical values of CO2, measured by distributed nodes, varied from 312 to 494 ppm (2016), and from 371 to 527 ppm (2017), depending on seasonal micro-climate change and site-specific conditions. The results of the AQ-monitoring long-term campaign for selected sensor nodes are presented with a relative error of 26.2% (PM10), 21.7% (O3), 25.5% (NO2), and 79.4% (CO). These interesting results suggest a partial compliance, excluding CO, with Data Quality Objectives (DQO) by the European Air Quality Directive (2008/50/EC) for Indicative (Informative) Measurements.
2025
air quality EC directive
air quality sensors
gas sensors
low-cost sensor-systems
particulate matter devices
urban air quality monitoring
wireless sensors network
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12079/87048
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