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‘Water, water, every where, Nor any drop to drink’
Diamond, Dermot
Despite decades of research and huge investment, remote monitoring of the state of fresh and sea-water using all but the simplest sensors remains prohibitively expensive. As water metering and charges are increasingly implemented across Europe, can the ordinary person expect to obtain devices that can enable them to independently check the quality of their drinking water? Will citizens be able to share this data, and access other data related to their environment, like air quality? The signs are that they will, but the path forward is not straightforward. In this lecture I will discuss the current status of autonomous sensors for environmental monitoring, and speculate on the key breakthroughs that could drive a sensor 'revolution', which has the potential to place a vast amount of environmental information in the public domain.
Keyword(s): Analytical chemistry; Chemical detectors; Environmental chemistry
Publication Date:
2014
Type: Conference item
Peer-Reviewed: No
Language(s): English
Institution: Dublin City University
Funder(s): Science Foundation Ireland
Citation(s): Diamond, Dermot (2014) ‘Water, water, every where, Nor any drop to drink’. In: RSC Public Lecture Series, 3 Apr 2014, London, UK.
File Format(s): application/pdf
Related Link(s): http://doras.dcu.ie/19930/1/RSC_invited_lecture.pdf
First Indexed: 2014-05-07 05:25:42 Last Updated: 2015-03-23 05:06:32