Unmanned surface vehicle for intelligent water quality assessment to promote sustainable human health

Muhammad Ibtsaam Qadir, Rafia Mumtaz, Mariam Manzoor, Misbah Saleem, Muhammad Ajmal Khan, Susanne Charlesworth

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
63 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Deteriorating water quality poses a substantial risk to human health, with billions at risk of waterborne diseases due to contamination. Insufficient water quality data augment risks as conventional monitoring methods lack comprehensive coverage. Technologies like the Internet of Things and machine learning offer real-time water quality monitoring and classification. IoT nodes often provide point data insufficient for monitoring the quality of entire water bodies. Remote sensing, though useful, has limitations such as measuring only optically active parameters and being affected by climate and resolution issues. To address these challenges, an unmanned surface vehicle named `AquaDrone' has been developed. AquaDrone traverses water bodies, collecting data of four key parameters (pH, dissolved oxygen, electrical conductivity, and temperature) along with GPS coordinates. The data is transmitted to a web portal via LoRa communication and Wi-Fi, where visualizations like data tables, trendlines and color-coded heatmaps are generated. A multilayer perceptron classifies water quality into five categories, aiding in real-time classification. A comparative analysis of various oversampling techniques has been conducted in the context of water quality classification. The AquaDrone offers a feasible solution for monitoring quality of small to medium-sized water bodies, crucial for safeguarding public health.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberws2024141
Pages (from-to)2259–2270
Number of pages12
JournalWater Science and Technology: Water Supply
Volume24
Issue number7
Early online date14 Jun 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2024

Bibliographical note

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits copying and redistribution for non-commercial purposes with no derivatives, provided the original work is properly cited (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)

Funder

This research work is the joint output of the British Council researcher exchange project under British Council-HEC Pak-UK Faculty Mobility Grant (F137– 2023).

Funding

This research work is the joint output of the British Council researcher exchange project under British Council-HEC Pak-UK Faculty Mobility Grant (F137– 2023).

FundersFunder number
British CouncilF137 – 2023

    Keywords

    • human health
    • Internet of Things
    • machine learning
    • real-time
    • unmanned surface vehicle
    • water quality monitoring,

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