| Literature DB >> 30781754 |
Dae-Hwan Park1, Seung-Taek Oh2, Jae-Hyun Lim3.
Abstract
Ultraviolet (UV) rays are electromagnetic waves that account for about 5% of solar light, and when overexposed, they pose malevolent effects on human skin and health. However, with recent reports on the beneficial effects of some wavelength bands of UV rays, people's interest in UV information has increased. This has resulted in requiring not just simple information, such as the amount of UV or UV index (UVI), but detailed UV information that directly affects health, such as EUVB (erythemally weighted UVB). However, calculating EUVB, which can be done by applying the erythemal weighted function on the intensity value in wavelength, requires specialized optical measurement devices, which cannot be easily accessed by the general public; furthermore, public institutions' UV information services do not offer EUVB information for individuals. Therefore, the present study proposes a UVI sensor-based portable measurement device, with which the general public can have easy access to UV-related information. The proposed device comprises a UVI sensor that can measure the intensity of erythemal UV radiation, a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) module that supports communication, and a micro controller unit (MCU) for key operations. In addition, it applies the ratio of EUVB by month/time, resulting from the actual analysis of natural light to calculate the EUVB and provides the amount of UVI and EUVB to check if they meet conditions required for outdoor activities through the device and smartphone applications. The applicability of the proposed device was verified by the measurement performance comparison test with the standard device, a spectrometer (CAS 140 CT), which showed an average error of 0.045 for UVI and 0.0014 W/m². The proposed device's offering of UV-related information such as UVI and EUVB to the user is expected to prevent potential damage due to exposure to UV and to support healthy outdoor activities.Entities:
Keywords: EUVB ratio; UV; UV index sensor; erythema weight; portable measurement device
Year: 2019 PMID: 30781754 PMCID: PMC6413165 DOI: 10.3390/s19040754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Current condition of the monthly erythemally weighted UV radiation (EUV) daily cycle (2017–2018; Cheonan, Chungcheongnam-do).
Figure 2Monthly/hourly erythemally weighted UVB (EUVB) ratio index graph (a) and the average (b).
Figure 3Portable measurement device and smartphone application. UVI: UV index; MCU: micro controller unit; BLE: Bluetooth Low Energy.
Hardware specifications.
| Type | Model Name | Details |
|---|---|---|
| UVI sensor | TOCON E2 | Sensing factor: UV Index, |
| Microcontroller Unit | Arduino Nano | ATmega328 |
| Display Module | 12864 OLED LCD | Pixel: 128 × 64, |
| BLE Module | HM-10 | Communication Protocol: BLE |
| Rechargeable Battery Module | PKCELL LP785060 | Capacity: 500 mAh, |
Figure 4Circuit diagram of the portable measurement device. DC: Data/Command; CS: Chip Select.
Figure 5The main process flow of the firmware.
Figure 6Transmission and reception protocol between the smartphone application and the device. DEV. ID: device serial number; CHK SUM: checksum.
Figure 7Smartphone application service UI (User Interface).
Daily EUV measurement data (unit: W/m2).
| Hour | CAS 140CT | Device | Abs. Error | Hour | CAS 140CT | Device | Abs. Error |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 0.000265 | 3.35E-07 | 0.000265 | 13 | 0.127031 | 0.122679 | 0.004352 |
| 6 | 0.003485 | 0.000621 | 0.002864 | 14 | 0.096203 | 0.094149 | 0.002054 |
| 7 | 0.018658 | 0.011525 | 0.007133 | 15 | 0.074512 | 0.071889 | 0.002623 |
| 8 | 0.047482 | 0.038996 | 0.008486 | 16 | 0.038775 | 0.036085 | 0.00269 |
| 9 | 0.08145 | 0.076481 | 0.004969 | 17 | 0.012062 | 0.009759 | 0.002303 |
| 10 | 0.117902 | 0.112449 | 0.005453 | 18 | 0.002144 | 0.000277 | 0.001867 |
| 11 | 0.14112 | 0.137568 | 0.003551 | 19 | 0.000163 | 0 | 0.000163 |
| 12 | 0.141011 | 0.138258 | 0.002753 | Mean Absolute Error | |||
Figure 8EUV graphs before and after the application of the compensation equation.
Figure 9Graphs of the measurement results.