| Literature DB >> 34300377 |
Huixin Zong1, Peter Brimblecombe2, Li Sun1, Peng Wei1, Kin-Fai Ho3, Qingli Zhang4,5, Jing Cai4,5, Haidong Kan4,5, Mengyuan Chu1, Wenwei Che1, Alexis Kai-Hon Lau1, Zhi Ning1.
Abstract
Sensor technology has enabled the development of portable low-cost monitoring kits that might supplement many applications in conventional monitoring stations. Despite the sensitivity of electrochemical gas sensors to environmental change, they are increasingly important in monitoring polluted microenvironments. The performance of a compact diffusion-based Personal Exposure Kit (PEK) was assessed for real-time gaseous pollutant measurement (CO, O3, and NO2) under typical environmental conditions encountered in the subtropical city of Hong Kong. A dynamic baseline tracking method and a range of calibration protocols to address system performance were explored under practical scenarios to assess the performance of the PEK in reducing the impact of rapid changes in the ambient environment in personal exposure assessment applications. The results show that the accuracy and stability of the ppb level gas measurement is enhanced even in heterogeneous environments, thus avoiding the need for data post-processing with mathematical algorithms, such as multi-linear regression. This establishes the potential for use in personal exposure monitoring, which has been difficult in the past, and for reporting more accurate and reliable data in real-time to support personal exposure assessment and portable air quality monitoring applications.Entities:
Keywords: Hong Kong; air quality monitoring; baseline correction; electrochemical gas sensor; microenvironments; personal exposure evaluation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34300377 DOI: 10.3390/s21144637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576