# AQEarth: Program Empowering Communities to Explore Map and Improve Air Quality

> **NIH NIH R44** · LUDLUM MEASUREMENTS, INC. · 2023 · $984,328

## Abstract

Project Summary
 Here we propose the development and implementation of a community-based air monitoring program for small
towns, cities and regions around the world. AQEarth will be a synthesis of the best aspects of Denver’s Love My Air
Program, funded by the Bloomberg Mayor’s Challenge, and AQTreks, a K-12 educational outreach program developed by
2B Technologies under a NIH/NIEHS SBIR Phase I and II project. AQEarth will empower communities to explore air
pollution in their own neighborhoods and identify those sources that contribute most to their personal exposures.
Communities participating in the AQEarth program will make use of three technologies developed successfully in three
different SBIR projects – two from NIH and one from NSF. The Personal Air Monitor (PAM) allows students and other
community members to measure the air pollutants CO, CO2 and particulate matter (PM1, PM2.5) along sidewalks, inside
their homes, schools and workplaces and inside vehicles like cars and buses. A Mobile Air Pollution Sensors (MAPS)
monitor will be developed here to upgrade our current CarTopper for measurements of five Criteria Air Pollutions – CO,
PM2.5, O3, NO2, SO2 – along with CO2, the primary tracer of combustion and the most significant greenhouse gas. Accurate
low-cost, sensor-based measurements of NO2 and SO2 will be made possible by the novel use of ozone generated by UV
light as an internal standard to reduce sensitivity drift (an innovation likely to be patentable) and the use of a zeroing
scrubber to cancel baseline drift. MAPS will enable mapping of these air pollutants throughout a city with high spatial
resolution using a combination of community vehicles such as parents’ cars, buses, trams and city service vehicles. The
third SBIR-developed technology that makes mobile measurements using low-cost sensors possible is AQSync, a fixed-
base monitoring station containing highly accurate miniaturized instruments. The AQSync will serve both as a walk-by or
drive-by reference station for maintaining the calibrations of the low-cost mobile sensors of the PAM and MAPS and as a
long-term monitoring station for determining the diurnal, day-to-day and seasonal variations of air pollutants at that
location.
 The AQEarth program will be deployed in three U.S. cities (Ft. Collins; CO, Anchorage, AL; Atlanta, GA), one tribal
area (Navajo Nation, NM), and one international city (Mexico City) over a period of three years. This will allow us to gain
experience with cities having a wide range of climates, a tribal jurisdiction, a community where environmental justice
advocates will participate (Atlanta) and an international city. The program will be continuously improved as we gain
experience with cities/tribes with widely different challenges. The AQEarth is a collaborative project with TD
Environmental Systems, LLC, a leader in applications of air quality sensors, and the Denver Department of Public Health
and Environment, where the highly successful Love M...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10679006
- **Project number:** 5R44ES024031-06
- **Recipient organization:** LUDLUM MEASUREMENTS, INC.
- **Principal Investigator:** Jessa Ellenburg
- **Activity code:** R44 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2023
- **Award amount:** $984,328
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2014-05-16 → 2024-07-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10679006

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10679006, AQEarth: Program Empowering Communities to Explore Map and Improve Air Quality (5R44ES024031-06). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-28 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10679006. Licensed CC0.

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