{"title":"ieee的一项epic倡议:圣阿尔班学院的学习者和比勒陀利亚大学的学生通过空气质量微传感寻求地球观测解决方案","authors":"S. Sinha, Phumudzo R. Bebwele, C. Mouton","doi":"10.1109/GHTC.2013.6713651","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper describes the design and implementation of a microsensor-based air-quality monitoring system intended for earth observations. Traditionally, air-quality monitoring systems are limited to centralized or static sites and thus obtain a limited amount of data for estimation of hazardous air pollutants. The system in this paper was designed to improve the shortcomings experienced by traditional air-quality monitoring systems. The system uses the wireless sensor network (WSNs) nodes to sense and transmit selected ambient air-quality parameters to a sensor sink, which relays these parameters to a data terminal where final data processing is completed and the user interface is situated. The project development team that was involved in the design comprised a senior undergraduate student at the University of Pretoria and a group of eight grade-11 secondary-school learners from St Alban's College, a boys' high school situated in Pretoria, South Africa. While the undergraduate final-year student designed an analogous system by first principles, the secondary-school learners used educational air-quality microsensor off-the-shelf components. The learners used an Android-based input/output sensor node to communicate to a mobile phone, which managed the upload to a Google drive folder. As a secondary outcome, the educational air-quality microsensor systems developed through this undertaking would serve as an educational tool for improving the public understanding of air-quality, including a new national air-quality act in South Africa. This project was completed as an endeavor of Engineering Projects In Community Service (EPICS) in IEEE.","PeriodicalId":168082,"journal":{"name":"2013 IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (GHTC)","volume":"12 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"An EPICS-in-IEEE initiative: Learners of St Alban's College and students of the University of Pretoria seek earth observation solutions through air-quality microsensing\",\"authors\":\"S. Sinha, Phumudzo R. Bebwele, C. Mouton\",\"doi\":\"10.1109/GHTC.2013.6713651\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This paper describes the design and implementation of a microsensor-based air-quality monitoring system intended for earth observations. Traditionally, air-quality monitoring systems are limited to centralized or static sites and thus obtain a limited amount of data for estimation of hazardous air pollutants. The system in this paper was designed to improve the shortcomings experienced by traditional air-quality monitoring systems. The system uses the wireless sensor network (WSNs) nodes to sense and transmit selected ambient air-quality parameters to a sensor sink, which relays these parameters to a data terminal where final data processing is completed and the user interface is situated. The project development team that was involved in the design comprised a senior undergraduate student at the University of Pretoria and a group of eight grade-11 secondary-school learners from St Alban's College, a boys' high school situated in Pretoria, South Africa. While the undergraduate final-year student designed an analogous system by first principles, the secondary-school learners used educational air-quality microsensor off-the-shelf components. The learners used an Android-based input/output sensor node to communicate to a mobile phone, which managed the upload to a Google drive folder. As a secondary outcome, the educational air-quality microsensor systems developed through this undertaking would serve as an educational tool for improving the public understanding of air-quality, including a new national air-quality act in South Africa. 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An EPICS-in-IEEE initiative: Learners of St Alban's College and students of the University of Pretoria seek earth observation solutions through air-quality microsensing
This paper describes the design and implementation of a microsensor-based air-quality monitoring system intended for earth observations. Traditionally, air-quality monitoring systems are limited to centralized or static sites and thus obtain a limited amount of data for estimation of hazardous air pollutants. The system in this paper was designed to improve the shortcomings experienced by traditional air-quality monitoring systems. The system uses the wireless sensor network (WSNs) nodes to sense and transmit selected ambient air-quality parameters to a sensor sink, which relays these parameters to a data terminal where final data processing is completed and the user interface is situated. The project development team that was involved in the design comprised a senior undergraduate student at the University of Pretoria and a group of eight grade-11 secondary-school learners from St Alban's College, a boys' high school situated in Pretoria, South Africa. While the undergraduate final-year student designed an analogous system by first principles, the secondary-school learners used educational air-quality microsensor off-the-shelf components. The learners used an Android-based input/output sensor node to communicate to a mobile phone, which managed the upload to a Google drive folder. As a secondary outcome, the educational air-quality microsensor systems developed through this undertaking would serve as an educational tool for improving the public understanding of air-quality, including a new national air-quality act in South Africa. This project was completed as an endeavor of Engineering Projects In Community Service (EPICS) in IEEE.