Special Issue on Low-Cost Portable, Wearable, and Distributed Sensors
摘要截稿:
全文截稿: 2020-04-20
影响因子: 2.649
期刊难度:
CCF分类: 无
中科院JCR分区:
• 大类 : 环境科学与生态学 - 3区
• 小类 : 工程:化工 - 3区
• 小类 : 工程:机械 - 3区
• 小类 : 环境科学 - 3区
• 小类 : 气象与大气科学 - 3区
Overview
The Journal of Aerosol Science is delighted to invite authors to submit papers for our virtual issue onLow-cost portable, wearable, and distributed sensors.
The increasing availability and quality of low-cost aerosol sensors promise to provide researchers, communities, and policy makers with measurements having unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. Researchers have begun to use these sensors to understand questions ranging from personal aerosol exposure to identifying pollution hot spots, and networks of these low-cost sensors have begun reporting aerosol concentrations to the public. However, these low-cost sensors pose challenges from a data quality and communication perspective. Consequently, the Journal of Aerosol Science is requesting papers on the topic of low-cost sensors.
We encourage research papers on how low-cost aerosol sensors are being evaluated and used by scientists and communities. This issue also seeks papers on some of the challenges to the use of low-cost sensors including data quality, the true cost of operating a sensor network, and communicating results to the public .
We invite authors to submit papers on (but are not limited to) the following topics:
The development and evaluation of new low-cost aerosol sensors;
Studies that demonstrate the use of low-cost sensors to identify poorly understood phenomena in indoor and outdoor environments;
The use of low-cost sensors to understand and/or address environmental justice challenges;
Strategies for addressing the data-quality challenges associated with low-cost sensors;
The use of low-cost sensing to understand personal exposure to aerosols;
Strategies for integrating low-cost sensor data into metrics that can be used by the public;
Using low-cost sensors to engage the public, including educational tools;
The use of low-cost sensors and potential challenges in mobile applications.