4 resultados para Wide-Area Measurements
em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal
Resumo:
Esta tese tem por objectivo o desenho e avaliação de um sistema de contagem e classificação de veículos automóveis em tempo-real e sem fios. Pretende, também, ser uma alternativa aos actuais equipamentos, muito intrusivos nas vias rodoviárias. Esta tese inclui um estudo sobre as comunicações sem fios adequadas a uma rede de equipamentos sensores rodoviários, um estudo sobre a utilização do campo magnético como meio físico de detecção e contagem de veículos e um estudo sobre a autonomia energética dos equipamentos inseridos na via, com recurso, entre outros, à energia solar. O projecto realizado no âmbito desta tese incorpora, entre outros, a digitalização em tempo real da assinatura magnética deixada pela passagem de um veículo, no campo magnético da Terra, o respectivo envio para servidor via rádio e WAN, Wide Area Network, e o desenvolvimento de software tendo por base a pilha de protocolos ZigBee. Foram desenvolvidas aplicações para o equipamento sensor, para o coordenador, para o painel de controlo e para a biblioteca de Interface de um futuro servidor aplicacional. O software desenvolvido para o equipamento sensor incorpora ciclos de detecção e digitalização, com pausas de adormecimento de baixo consumo, e a activação das comunicações rádio durante a fase de envio, assegurando assim uma estratégia de poupança energética. Os resultados obtidos confirmam a viabilidade desta tecnologia para a detecção e contagem de veículos, assim como para a captura de assinatura usando magnetoresistências. Permitiram ainda verificar o alcance das comunicações sem fios com equipamento sensor embebido no asfalto e confirmar o modelo de cálculo da superfície do painel solar bem como o modelo de consumo energético do equipamento sensor.
Resumo:
Mestrado em Segurança e Higiene no Trabalho.
Resumo:
Throughout the world, epidemiological studies were established to examine the relationship between air pollution and mortality rates and adverse respiratory health effects. However, despite the years of discussion the correlation between adverse health effects and atmospheric pollution remains controversial, partly because these studies are frequently restricted to small and well-monitored areas. Monitoring air pollution is complex due to the large spatial and temporal variations of pollution phenomena, the high costs of recording instruments, and the low sampling density of a purely instrumental approach. Therefore, together with the traditional instrumental monitoring, bioindication techniques allow for the mapping of pollution effects over wide areas with a high sampling density. In this study, instrumental and biomonitoring techniques were integrated to support an epidemiological study that will be developed in an industrial area located in Gijon in the coastal of central Asturias, Spain. Three main objectives were proposed to (i) analyze temporal patterns of PM10 concentrations in order to apportion emissions sources, (ii) investigate spatial patterns of lichen conductivity to identify the impact of the studied industrial area in air quality, and (iii) establish relationships amongst lichen conductivity with some site-specific characteristics. Samples of the epiphytic lichen Parmelia sulcata were transplanted in a grid of 18 by 20 km with an industrial area in the center. Lichens were exposed for a 5-mo period starting in April 2010. After exposure, lichen samples were soaked in 18-MΩ water aimed at determination of water electrical conductivity and, consequently, lichen vitality and cell damage. A marked decreasing gradient of lichens conductivity relative to distance from the emitting sources was observed. Transplants from a sampling site proximal to the industrial area reached values 10-fold higher than levels far from it. This finding showed that lichens reacted physiologically in the polluted industrial area as evidenced by increased conductivity correlated to contamination level. The integration of temporal PM10 measurements and analysis of wind direction corroborated the importance of this industrialized region for air quality measurements and identified the relevance of traffic for the urban area.
Resumo:
This study explores a large set of OC and EC measurements in PM(10) and PM(2.5) aerosol samples, undertaken with a long term constant analytical methodology, to evaluate the capability of the OC/EC minimum ratio to represent the ratio between the OC and EC aerosol components resulting from fossil fuel combustion (OC(ff)/EC(ff)). The data set covers a wide geographical area in Europe, but with a particular focus upon Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom, and includes a great variety of sites: urban (background, kerbside and tunnel), industrial, rural and remote. The highest minimum ratios were found in samples from remote and rural sites. Urban background sites have shown spatially and temporally consistent minimum ratios, of around 1.0 for PM(10) and 0.7 for PM(2.5).The consistency of results has suggested that the method could be used as a tool to derive the ratio between OC and EC from fossil fuel combustion and consequently to differentiate OC from primary and secondary sources. To explore this capability, OC and EC measurements were performed in a busy roadway tunnel in central Lisbon. The OC/EC ratio, which reflected the composition of vehicle combustion emissions, was in the range of 03-0.4. Ratios of OC/EC in roadside increment air (roadside minus urban background) in Birmingham, UK also lie within the range 03-0.4. Additional measurements were performed under heavy traffic conditions at two double kerbside sites located in the centre of Lisbon and Madrid. The OC/EC minimum ratios observed at both sites were found to be between those of the tunnel and those of urban background air, suggesting that minimum values commonly obtained for this parameter in open urban atmospheres over-predict the direct emissions of OC(ff) from road transport. Possible reasons for this discrepancy are explored. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.