As cities continue to grow, maintaining blue skies requires more than favorable weather conditions — it increasingly depends on intelligent and efficient environmental governance.
Urban air pollution is becoming more dynamic, mobile, and complex, posing growing challenges for traditional management approaches that rely heavily on manual inspections and fixed monitoring stations.
In response, Focused Photonics Inc. (FPI) has developed its “AI Ambient Air Super Brain” system, integrating real-time sensing, AI-driven analysis, and aerial inspection capabilities to reshape urban air quality management workflows. Recently deployed in a district-level air quality management project in Hangzhou, the system demonstrated how AI and intelligent monitoring technologies can work together to improve the efficiency and responsiveness of urban environmental governance.
AI ambient air super brain
From Detection to Source Identification
At the project site, a quantum lidar system installed at an elevated urban location continuously scans the surrounding atmosphere.
During a routine monitoring operation, the system detected an abnormal increase in pollutant concentration in the northeastern area of the district. Once the anomaly was identified, the AI Ambient Air Super Brain immediately initiated its analysis workflow.
Radar imagery, monitoring data, and grid-based spatial information were rapidly integrated to identify the pollution hotspot and estimate the potential diffusion range. The system then narrowed the suspected source area to a specific road section in the Xixing subdistrict.
At the same time, the AI Ambient Air Super Brain automatically dispatched Air Pollution Source Apportionment Drone System for on-site investigation. Equipped with high-precision air quality monitoring instruments, the drone was able to collect real-time data on pollutants including PM₂.₅ and PM₁₀.
During flight operations, the drone dynamically optimized its inspection route based on platform instructions, focusing on high-concentration areas while simultaneously transmitting monitoring data, live imagery, flight trajectories, and source-tracing results back to the platform to support follow-up inspection and response actions.
From Single Response to Systematic Governance
One of the key challenges in air pollution management is that pollutants are often highly dynamic — sudden in appearance, mobile in movement, and fast in diffusion. By the time abnormal concentrations are detected, pollution sources may already have shifted.
Traditionally, identifying pollution sources has often been compared to “searching for a needle in a haystack,” with limited manual inspection coverage, difficult source tracing, and relatively long response cycles.
FPI’s 3D Ambient Air Monitoring & Coordinated Control Solution is helping reshape this process by building an intelligent workflow capable of sensing, analyzing, and tracking pollution events in real time. The system connects real-time monitoring, AI-driven analysis, aerial source tracing, and closed-loop response into a coordinated management framework.
According to project feedback, since the deployment of the system, the efficiency of handling pollution-related incidents has significantly improved, response cycles have been further shortened, and the impact of pollutant diffusion has been effectively reduced.
As on-site engineer described it: “In the past, people were searching for pollution sources. Now, the system can respond as soon as pollution begins to emerge.”
A Local Deployment with Global Relevance
While this project was implemented at the district level in Hangzhou, the governance approach behind it carries broader relevance for cities worldwide.
Today, urban areas across the globe are facing increasingly complex pollution sources, rising demands for refined environmental management, limited efficiency in manual inspection methods, and growing expectations for real-time decision-making capabilities. Against this backdrop, the integration of AI, atmospheric sensing technologies, and drone-based inspection is offering a new approach to urban air quality management.
For FPI, bringing advanced scientific instruments into real-world governance scenarios represents more than achieving accurate measurement. More importantly, it means enabling these technologies to become part of the long-term infrastructure supporting urban environmental management.
The value lies not only in delivering data, but also in supporting decision-making; not only in detecting anomalies, but also in accelerating response actions; and not only in serving a single monitoring task, but in helping cities build smarter environmental governance systems that can sense, analyze, and respond in a more connected and efficient way.