Scientific journal paper Q1
Assessing the detection of floating plastic litter with advanced remote sensing technologies in a hydrodynamic test facility
A. de Fockert (de Fockert, A.); M. A. Eleveld (Eleveld, M. A.); W. Bakker (Bakker, W.); João Felício (Felício, J. M.); Tomás Soares Da Costa (Costa, T. S.); Mário Vala (Vala, M.); Paulo Marques (Marques, P.); Nuno Leonor (Leonor, N.); António A. Moreira (Moreira, A.); Jorge Rodrigues da Costa (Costa, J. R.); Rafael F. S. Caldeirinha (Caldeirinha, R. F. S. ); Sérgio Matos (Matos, S. A.); Carlos António Cardoso Fernandes (Fernandes, C. A.); Nelson J. G. Fonseca (Fonseca, N.); M.D. Simpson (Simpson, M. D.); A. Marino (Marino, A.); E. Gandini (Gandini, E.); A. Camps (Camps, A.); A. Perez-Portero (Perez-Portero, A.); A. Gonga (Gonga, A.); O. Burggraaff (Burggraaff, O.); S. P. Garaba (Garaba, S. P.); M.S. Salama (Salama, M. S.); Q. Xiao (Xiao, Q.); R. Calvert (Calvert, R.); T. S. van den Bremer (van den Bremer, T. S.); Peter de Maagt (de Maagt, P.); et al.
Journal Title
Scientific Reports
Year (definitive publication)
2024
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
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Abstract
Remote sensing technologies have the potential to support monitoring of floating plastic litter in aquatic environments. An experimental campaign was carried out in a large-scale hydrodynamic test facility to explore the detectability of floating plastics in ocean waves, comparing and contrasting different microwave and optical remote sensing technologies. The extensive experiments revealed that detection of plastics was feasible with microwave measurement techniques using X and Ku-bands with VV polarization at a plastic threshold concentration of 1 item/m2 or 1–10 g/m2. The optical measurements further revealed that spectral and polarization properties in the visible and infrared spectrum had diagnostic information unique to the floating plastics. This assessment presents a crucial step towards enabling the detection of aquatic plastics using advanced remote sensing technologies. We demonstrate that remote sensing has the potential for global targeting of plastic litter hotspots, which is needed for supporting effective clean-up efforts and scientific evidence-based policy making.
Acknowledgements
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Keywords
  • Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering - Engineering and Technology
Funding Records
Funding Reference Funding Entity
PID2021-126436OB-C21 UPC

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