Smartphone to detect air pollution!
Sydney: People could soon be using their smartphones to combat a deadly
form of air pollution, thanks to a new low-cost method of detecting nitrogen
dioxide (NO2), a significant air pollutant, says a study.
"The revolutionary method we have developed is a great start to
creating a handheld, low-cost and personalised NO2 sensor that can even be
incorporated into smartphones," said project leader Kourosh
Kalantar-zadeh, professor at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia.
Nitrogen dioxide increases the risk of respiratory disorders in children
and can severely affect the elderly in particular.
The negative impact of nitrogen dioxide could be prevented by access to
personalised, highly selective, sensitive and reliable monitoring systems that
could detect harmful levels of the gas early, Kalantar-zadeh said.
"The method we have developed is not only more cost-effective, it also
works better than the sensors currently used to detect this dangerous
gas," Kalantar-zadeh said.
Kalantar-zadeh developed the new method for sensing nitrogen dioxide
together with fellow RMIT researchers and colleagues from the Chinese Academy
of Sciences.
The sensors, which operate by physically absorbing nitrogen dioxide gas
molecules onto flakes of tin disulphide, a yellowish-brown pigment generally
used in varnish for gilding.
To create sensors, researchers transformed this material into flakes just a
few atoms thick.
The large surface area of these flakes has a high affinity to nitrogen
dioxide molecules that allows its highly selective absorption.
The main contributors of nitrogen dioxide are the burning of fossil fuels,
particularly in coal-fired power stations and diesel engines, which can impact
on the health of people in urban areas.
The study was published in the journal ACS Nano.
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