Abstract
As the economy develops and the environmental impact of the greenhouse effect becomes more apparent, the need for precise measurement of specific gas concentrations in the air has become increasingly pressing. Nevertheless, as a representative of greenhouse gases, CO2 gas detectors are susceptible to environmental temperature fluctuations, which impairs the accuracy of detection. To address this issue, the research team innovatively combined the genetic algorithm (GA) and the wavelet neural network (WNN) to develop a solution for the temperature compensation problem of the infrared CO2 gas sensor. The non-dominant sorted genetic algorithm II (NSGA-II) was integrated into the GA to achieve a balance between the accuracy, complexity, and temperature performance of the model through multi-objective optimization. The results showed that compared with other existing models, the GA-WNN model proposed in this study can significantly reduce the difference between the detected values and the actual environmental values under various temperature conditions when processing data. Especially at an ambient temperature of 49 °C, for a true CO2 concentration of 2000 ppm, the detection value processed by the GA-WNN algorithm was 2046 ppm, with a relative error of only 2.3 %, far lower than the 9.8 % of Faster RCNN algorithm and 11.5 % of WNN algorithm. The contribution of the research is the proposal of a novel temperature compensation method that significantly enhances the precision of infrared CO2 gas sensors. This is of paramount importance for enhancing the accuracy of gas detection in environmental monitoring and industrial control.
Published Version
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