原位光学水质监测传感器--应用、挑战和未来机遇

Manish Kumar, K. Khamis, R. Stevens, David M. Hannah, Chris Bradley
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摘要

水质问题仍然是全球水资源不安全的一个主要原因,而实时、低成本的监测解决方案对于水污染的修复和管理至关重要。基于荧光、吸收、散射和反射原理的光学传感器提供了有效的水质监测(WQM)解决方案。然而,由于成本和校准方面的问题,要在不同规模和环境中广泛采用这些技术仍面临巨大挑战。本综述讨论了基于多峰值荧光、全光谱吸收、光散射和遥感表面反射的光学水质监测目前和未来面临的挑战。我们强调,基于荧光的传感器可以检测相对低浓度的芳香族化合物(如蛋白质和腐殖酸),并量化和追踪有机污染(如污水或工业废水)。相反,基于吸光度的传感器(紫外-可见-红外,UV-VIS-IR)则适用于监测更广泛的生化变量(如硝酸盐、溶解有机碳和浊度)。尽管在最佳条件下测量荧光和吸光度非常准确,但在动态环境中,由于环境温度和浊度的影响,测量荧光和吸光度的要求很高。基于散射的浊度传感器可以详细了解沉积物的迁移情况,同时还能提高荧光和吸光度测量的准确性。微型光谱仪和发光二极管(LED)等微传感元件以及深度计算的最新进展为荧光(激发-发射矩阵)和吸光度的原位全光谱分析提供了令人兴奋的前景,有助于更好地了解干扰因素,从而降低信噪比,提高现有污染物的检测精度,并实现对新型污染物的检测。我们研究了将原位光谱学和遥感反射率结合起来在大江大河、湖泊和海洋水体中进行光学水质监测的应用,以便从点观测扩展到大型水体,监测藻类繁殖、沉积物负荷、水温和溢油。最后,我们概述了光学技术在检测经处理水体和自然水体中新出现的污染物方面的未来应用。我们主张加强工业界、学术界和公共政策之间的协同作用,以实现有效的污染控制和水管理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
In-situ optical water quality monitoring sensors—applications, challenges, and future opportunities
Water quality issues remain a major cause of global water insecurity, and real-time low-cost monitoring solutions are central to the remediation and management of water pollution. Optical sensors, based on fluorescence, absorbance, scattering and reflectance-based principles, provide effective water quality monitoring (WQM) solutions. However, substantial challenges remain to their wider adoption across scales and environments amid cost and calibration-related concerns. This review discusses the current and future challenges in optical water quality monitoring based on multi-peak fluorescence, full-spectrum absorbance, light-scattering and remotely sensed surface reflectance. We highlight that fluorescence-based sensors can detect relatively low concentrations of aromatic compounds (e.g., proteins and humic acids) and quantify and trace organic pollution (e.g., sewage or industrial effluents). Conversely, absorbance-based sensors (Ultraviolet-Visible-Infra-red, UV-VIS-IR) are suitable for monitoring a wider range of physiochemical variables (e.g., nitrate, dissolved organic carbon and turbidity). Despite being accurate under optimal conditions, measuring fluorescence and absorbance can be demanding in dynamic environments due to ambient temperature and turbidity effects. Scattering-based turbidity sensors provide a detailed understanding of sediment transport and, in conjunction, improve the accuracy of fluorescence and absorbance measurements. Recent advances in micro-sensing components such as mini-spectrometers and light emitting diodes (LEDs), and deep computing provide exciting prospects of in-situ full-spectrum analysis of fluorescence (excitation-emission matrices) and absorbance for improved understanding of interferants to reduce the signal-to-noise ratio, improve detection accuracies of existing pollutants, and enable detection of newer contaminants. We examine the applications combining in-situ spectroscopy and remotely sensed reflectance for scaling Optical WQM in large rivers, lakes and marine bodies to scale from point observations to large water bodies and monitor algal blooms, sediment load, water temperature and oil spills. Lastly, we provide an overview of future applications of optical techniques in detecting emerging contaminants in treated and natural waters. We advocate for greater synergy between industry, academia and public policy for effective pollution control and water management.
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