Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2020

University of Wollongong

Air

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Air Quality Near Busy Australian Roads Up To 10 Times Worse Than Official Figures, Hugh I. Forehead Jan 2020

Air Quality Near Busy Australian Roads Up To 10 Times Worse Than Official Figures, Hugh I. Forehead

SMART Infrastructure Facility - Papers

Air quality on Australia’s roads matters. On any given day (when we’re not in lockdown) people meet, commute, exercise, shop and walk with children near busy streets. But to date, air quality monitoring at roadsides has been inadequate. I and my colleagues wanted to change that. Using materials purchased from electronics and hardware stores for around A$150, we built our own air quality monitors. Our newly published research reveals how our devices detected particulate pollution at busy intersections at levels ten times worse than background levels measured at official air monitoring stations.


Assessing The Effects Of Mobility On Air Quality: The Liverpool Smart Pedestrian Project, Nicolas R. Verstaevel, Johan Barthelemy, Hugh I. Forehead, Bilal Arshad, Pascal Perez Jan 2020

Assessing The Effects Of Mobility On Air Quality: The Liverpool Smart Pedestrian Project, Nicolas R. Verstaevel, Johan Barthelemy, Hugh I. Forehead, Bilal Arshad, Pascal Perez

SMART Infrastructure Facility - Papers

With the drastic increase of their urban population, cities face huge challenges to maintain and update their infrastructures. Assessing in real time the effect of urban policies will be a key tool in the future of urban planning. In this paper, we discuss of mobility and its impact on air quality. We introduce a pilot project in which low cost IoT sensors are used to monitor flow of cars and pedestrians and concentration of particulate matters within the Australian city of Liverpool.