Journal of King Saud University: Computer and Information Sciences (Jan 2023)
An end-to-end real-time pollutants spilling recognition in wastewater based on the IoT-ready SENSIPLUS platform
Abstract
The problem of detecting illegal pollutants in wastewater is of fundamental importance for public health and security. The availability of distributed, low–cost and low–power monitoring systems, particularly enforced by IoT communication mechanisms and low-complexity machine learning algorithms, would make it feasible and easy to manage in a widespread manner. Accordingly, an End-to-End IoT-ready node for the sensing, local processing, and transmission of the data collected on the pollutants in the wastewater is presented here. The proposed system, organized in sensing and data processing modules, can recognize and distinguish contaminants from unknown substances typically present in wastewater. This is particularly important in the classification stage since distinguishing between background (not of interest) and foreground (of interest) substances drastically improves the classification performance, especially in terms of false positive rates. The measurement system, i.e., the sensing part, is represented by the so-called Smart Cable Water based on the SENSIPLUS chip, which integrates an array of sensors detecting various water-soluble substances through impedance spectroscopy. The data processing is based on a commercial Micro Control Unit (MCU), including an anomaly detection module, a classification module, and a false positive reduction module, all based on machine learning algorithms that have a computational complexity suitable for low-cost hardware implementation.An extensive experimental campaign on different contaminants has been carried out to train machine-learning algorithms suitable for low-cost and low-power MCU. The corresponding dataset has been made publicly available for download. The obtained results demonstrate an excellent classification ability, achieving an accuracy of more than 95% on average, and are a reliable “proof of concept” of a pervasive IoT system for distributed monitoring.