Low-Cost Environmental Monitoring Station to Acquire Health Quality Factors †

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Abstract

With the exponential development of MEMS (Micro-Electromechanical Systems) in the last decade, emphasis has been placed on the construction of IoT devices in conjunction with an appropriate information system to assist citizens in various fields (transportation, trade, etc.). More specifically, in the health sector,, there are specific IoT devices which can monitor a patient’s health condition or provide environmental data for the area, information which affects health quality conditions. In densely populated areas and especially in large cities, in terms of environmental pollution, as well as the known issue of air pollution, citizens are also exposed to solar radiation (ultraviolet UVA UVB radiation), as well as to noise pollution in areas where people live and work. Ultraviolet radiation, especially during the summer months, is responsible for skin cancer and various eye diseases, while noise pollution can create mental disorders in humans, especially in children. In this article, a low-cost solar radiation and noise pollution monitoring station is presented. The parts that compose the station and its implementation are a microcontroller (TTGO-OLED32) with an integrated LoRa device, an ultraviolet radiation sensor and sound sensors. In addition, a mini ups device is used in case of power failure and a GPS device is utilized for the location point. The measurements are obtained by the sensors every ten minutes and are transmitted via the LoRa network to an application server in which the user has direct access to the environmental data of a specific area. In conclusion, the data obtained from such IoT devices help in the study of cities to optimize factors in people’s lives.

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APA

Christakis, I., Orfanos, V. A., Chalkiadakis, P., & Rimpas, D. (2023). Low-Cost Environmental Monitoring Station to Acquire Health Quality Factors †. Engineering Proceedings, 58(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/ecsa-10-16096

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