Active self-testing noise measurement sensors for large-scale environmental sensor networks


Abstract:

Large-scale noise pollution sensor networks consist of hundreds of spatially distributed microphones that measure environmental noise. These networks provide historical and real-time environmental data to citizens and decision makers and are therefore a key technology to steer environmental policy. However, the high cost of certified environmental microphone sensors render large-scale environmental networks prohibitively expensive. Several environmental network projects have started using off-the-shelf low-cost microphone sensors to reduce their costs, but these sensors have higher failure rates and produce lower quality data. To offset this disadvantage, we developed a low-cost noise sensor that actively checks its condition and indirectly the integrity of the data it produces. The main design concept is to embed a 13 mm speaker in the noise sensor casing and, by regularly scheduling a frequency sweep, estimate the evolution of the microphone's frequency response over time. This paper presents our noise sensor's hardware and software design together with the results of a test deployment in a large-scale environmental network in Belgium. Our middle-range-value sensor (around €50) effectively detected all experienced malfunctions, in laboratory tests and outdoor deployments, with a few false positives. Future improvements could further lower the cost of our sensor below €10. © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Año de publicación:

2013

Keywords:

  • Quality assessment
  • Environmental monitoring
  • Sensor testing

Fuente:

googlegoogle
scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso abierto

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Ingeniería ambiental
  • Ciencia ambiental
  • Sensor

Áreas temáticas:

  • Geología, hidrología, meteorología
  • Ingeniería sanitaria
  • Métodos informáticos especiales