Sensly is a portable pollution sensor capable of detecting the pollution levels in the air using its onboard gas sensors to collect information about the various gases present. This information can be fed directly to your smartphone for real-time push notification updates. Sensly uses industrial sensors that assure an accurate reading of the office, home, or work environment. Being aware of this data helps you to take action and bring the pollution levels down around you.
Our team at Altitude Tech LTD are big fans of the Raspberry Pi mini computer. We’re really keen to help the Raspberry Pi community develop their own Sensly device and start working on experiments whilst learning about different types of gases. We’ve developed the Sensly Hat for the Raspberry Pi.
This is the section for all you graph lovers out there.
Creating a Plotly Account and Getting Your Credentials
Next we need to create a plotly account. Head over to plot.ly to do this.
Once you’re done you need to head over to the settings to get your username, API key and streaming tokens. You’ll need 11 streaming tokens.
2
Update the Config.json File
To set up Sensly to log directly to plotly we need to first of all download the required files. These can be found at https://github.com/Altitude-Tech/Sensly_Plotly, to download these files on your pi, open the terminal and type the command
Once you get your API Keys and Streaming Tokens we need to put these into your config.json file which is found in the Sensly Plotly file you downloaded at the start of this instructable.
$ sudo nano /Path/To/Sensly_Plotly/config.json
Add your username, API_Key and streaming tokens to the file
3
Run the Sensly_Plotly Script
Next, we need to ensure that you have put the R0 values you obtained during calibration into the Sensly_Plotly.py script you put them in the area shown in the first picture.
Make sure you are connected to the internet then press f5 to run the script, if successful your pi should open a web browser and start logging Sensly data to the web. The graph on the left hand side is the gases being detected and the graph on the right hand side is the particulate matter being detected.