Sensors (Oct 2016)

Performance Evaluation and Community Application of Low-Cost Sensors for Ozone and Nitrogen Dioxide

  • Rachelle M. Duvall,
  • Russell W. Long,
  • Melinda R. Beaver,
  • Keith G. Kronmiller,
  • Michael L. Wheeler,
  • James J. Szykman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s16101698
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. 1698

Abstract

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This study reports on the performance of electrochemical-based low-cost sensors and their use in a community application. CairClip sensors were collocated with federal reference and equivalent methods and operated in a network of sites by citizen scientists (community members) in Houston, Texas and Denver, Colorado, under the umbrella of the NASA-led DISCOVER-AQ Earth Venture Mission. Measurements were focused on ozone (O3) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2). The performance evaluation showed that the CairClip O3/NO2 sensor provided a consistent measurement response to that of reference monitors (r2 = 0.79 in Houston; r2 = 0.72 in Denver) whereas the CairClip NO2 sensor measurements showed no agreement to reference measurements. The CairClip O3/NO2 sensor data from the citizen science sites compared favorably to measurements at nearby reference monitoring sites. This study provides important information on data quality from low-cost sensor technologies and is one of few studies that reports sensor data collected directly by citizen scientists.

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