High-Resolution Air Quality Prediction Using Low-Cost Sensors
Thibaut Cassard, Gr\'egoire Jauvion, David Lissmyr

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that low-cost sensors significantly enhance high-resolution air quality predictions, especially in areas with dense sensor networks, offering a cost-effective alternative to traditional monitoring stations.
Contribution
It presents a case study showing how integrating low-cost sensors improves air quality prediction accuracy and highlights the effectiveness of dense sensor networks for monitoring.
Findings
Low-cost sensors improve prediction accuracy by up to 25%.
Sensor density correlates with increased prediction accuracy.
In high-density areas, low-cost sensors alone outperform official stations.
Abstract
The use of low-cost sensors in air quality monitoring networks is still a much-debated topic among practitioners: they are much cheaper than traditional air quality monitoring stations set up by public authorities (a few hundred dollars compared to a few dozens of thousand dollars) at the cost of a lower accuracy and robustness. This paper presents a case study of using low-cost sensors measurements in an air quality prediction engine. The engine predicts jointly PM2.5 and PM10 concentrations in the United States at a very high resolution in the range of a few dozens of meters. It is fed with the measurements provided by official air quality monitoring stations, the measurements provided by a network of more than 4000 low-cost sensors across the country, and traffic estimates. We show that the use of low-cost sensors' measurements improves the engine's accuracy very significantly. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAir Quality Monitoring and Forecasting · Air Quality and Health Impacts · Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
