Sensor Package Aims To Predict Acid Rain
Acid rain sucks, particularly if you run a fancy university with lots of lovely statues outside. If youβd like to try and predict when itβs going to occur, you might like this project from [Mohammad Nihal].
When rain is particularly acidic, itβs usually because of the combination of sulfur dioxide or nitrogen dioxide and moisture in the atmosphere. This combination ends up making sulfuric acid or nitric acid that then falls to the ground as precipitation. The low-pH rain that results can harm ecosystems, melt statues, and just generally give everyone a hard time.
[Mohammed] decided to try and predict acid rain by building a simple device based on an Arduino Nano. It records SO2 levels with an MQ-136 gas sensor, and NO2 levels with an unspecified MEMS-based sensor. Thereβs also a DHT11 temperature & humidity sensor in the mix, which is important since moisture content plays a role. The Arduino reads these sensors and uses a simple predictive algorithm to create an βAcid Rain Risk Scoreβ that is displayed on a 16Γ2 character LCD. Itβs all wrapped up in a fun 3D printed enclosure that looks like a cloud.
There are some limitations to the device. Namely, it doesnβt necessarily have a great read on atmospheric SO2 and NO2 levels in the atmosphere, particularly at altitudes where rain is formed, because the sensor sits inside the device indoors. However, the basic concept is there, and improvements could certainly be made with some upgrades and further research.