Skip to main content

Spanish researchers develop new infrared emissions monitoring program that does not disrupt traffic flows

Spanish researchers believe they have found a new way of measuring road-side air quality with an infrared camera system that can remotely measure vehicle emissions by scanning the unique infrared signatures of various pollutants such as carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, and so on.
September 27, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Spanish researchers believe they have found a new way of measuring road-side air quality with an infrared camera system that can remotely measure vehicle emissions by scanning the unique infrared signatures of various pollutants such as carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, and so on.

A fixed-point camera measures and then feeds the gas concentrations it has recorded into a sophisticated software program using a high-speed rotating wheel of lens filters to enable each unit to measure the quantity of emissions from the exhaust pipe of each passing vehicle, even if it is travelling at motorway speeds. The system produces a chemical fingerprint for each passing vehicle and builds up an emissions profile for the section of highway being monitored.

In a test case this summer, researchers from the Remote Sensing and Infrared Image Laboratory at the Universidad Carlos III in Madrid monitored and analysed the A6 motorway leading into Madrid. And, according to researcher Victor Gil Gonzalez, the team was quickly able “to quantify gas emissions and see which cars sending the most pollution into the air." The camera system also analyzed ratios, like the proportion of carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide, which in a properly functioning engine should remain low even during periods of heavy fuel consumption.

The project is not the first to use remote sensing to evaluate emission levels at the road-side, but it claims to be the first to be able to pinpoint the most environmentally damaging vehicles without reducing the capacity or flow rate of the road being measured. The clever thing about the new Spanish system is that it can provide real-time emissions data for a four-lane highway without disrupting traffic patterns, say the researchers.

Related Content

  • Thinking compaction
    October 1, 2024
    Sophisticated compaction technology is proving it worth to speed road construction.
  • Luxembourg duty for KiTraffic Plus
    September 28, 2023

    Luxembourg has opted for Kistler’s KiTraffic Plus weigh-in-motion system as it implements new commercial vehicle enforcement to meet the European Union requirements.

    The WIM installation is located on the A6 motorway about 2km from the border with Belgium. Several hundred meters of the road surface were renewed ahead of time so there would be no need to replace the sensors after a few years because of scheduled maintenance. The complete KiTraffic Plus system weighs trucks and delivery vans without interrupting motorway traffic, providing the basis for efficient weight enforcement.

  • Dynapac’s F1250CS Plus Compact Paver
    June 16, 2023
    It’s the ‘Plus factor’ with Dynapac revamped F1250CS Compact Paver, especially when used with Dynapac’s RC360 Remote - a double portion of power and precision.
  • New tunnelling machines are coming to market
    May 13, 2015
    Major gains in tunnelling productivity and performance are claimed for a series of new machines now coming to market These new tools will help contractors boost productivity and versatility in an array of applications. The new equipment items are designed for a variety of tasks, including drilling and shotcreting duties. One of the leaders in the underground equipment sector, Atlas Copco, has a new line-up of single and twin boom drill rigs, which suit duties in smaller tunnelling applications. The fi