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Drive-by air pollution sensing systems: challenges and future directions

  • Hassan Zarrar
    ,
  • Vladimir Dyo
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Open access

Abstract

Air pollution has become a significant health, environmental and economic problem worldwide. The conventional approach of deploying fixed high-end air quality monitoring stations provides accurate measurements but can be expensive to deploy and maintain. As a result, the stations are typically deployed in a few strategic locations with various spatial interpolation or prediction models to estimate the air quality values from unsampled points. Recently, drive-by air quality sensing has emerged as a popular approach due to its dynamic nature, high spatial coverage, and low operational costs while providing high-resolution data. At the same time, drive-by sensing has introduced a range of novel research challenges in terms of spatial and temporal coverage, mobile sensor calibration, and deployment strategies. This paper provides a systematic review and analysis of the recent work in this area, focusing on vehicular platforms, deployment strategies, primary challenges, and promising research directions.

Publication Information

Output type

Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Original language

English

Pages from-to (Number of pages)

Pages 23692-23703 (12 pages)

Journal (Volume, Issue Number)

IEEE Sensors Journal (Volume 23, Issue 19)

Publication milestones

  • Accepted/In press - 08/08/2023
  • Published - 21/08/2023

Publication status

Published - 21/08/2023

ISSN

1530-437X

External Publication IDs

  • handle.net: 10547/625961
  • Scopus: 85168679875