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Company type | Private |
|---|---|
| Industry | Environmental technology, Air quality monitoring |
| Founded | 2021 |
| Headquarters | United States |
Area served | USA, India, Switzerland, Netherlands, Slovakia, Serbia |
Key people | Dmitry Trubitsyn (founder), Vitalii Matiunin (co-founder, CEO) |
| Products | Air quality monitoring systems, data analytics platforms |
| Website | airvoice |
Airvoice is an environmental technology company specialising in air quality monitoring. The company produces sensor-based hardware and cloud-based software for measuring atmospheric pollutants in residential, commercial, and industrial settings.[1] The company operates in the USA, India, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Slovakia, and Serbia.[1] Indian operations are headed by Col. Ashwini K. Channan.[2]
Products and technology
editAirvoice develops environmental monitoring systems that measure atmospheric parameters including particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), ozone (O3), carbon monoxide (CO), sulfur dioxide (SO2), carbon dioxide (CO2), and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), along with meteorological variables such as temperature, humidity, wind speed, and atmospheric pressure.[3][1] Sensor data is transmitted to cloud infrastructure to produce real-time pollution maps and analytical reports.[1]
Enterprise and industrial solutions
editThe company supplies air quality monitoring and management tools for commercial, industrial, and municipal clients. Its product range includes Airvoice.Indoor, a platform for continuous indoor air quality monitoring in commercial and office buildings.[1] The company's equipment and analytical services are used in municipal, industrial, and urban planning applications across several countries. Airvoice has also presented its industrial emissions monitoring work at international forums, including the Source Testing Association's Continuous Emissions Monitoring (CEM) conference.[4]
In Indore, Airvoice served as a technical partner alongside the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi in the Confederation of Indian Industry's (CII) Cleaner Air Better Life airshed management programme, conducted in collaboration with Smart City Indore, the Madhya Pradesh Pollution Control Board, and the California Air Resources Board.[3] Under the programme, 50 sensor-based air quality monitoring devices were deployed across the city, and a machine learning model based on the random forest algorithm was developed to estimate PM2.5 concentrations at sub-kilometre resolution, generating ward-level pollution heatmaps to inform municipal policy.[3]
Consumer products
editIn late 2025, Airvoice expanded its product range with the release of Airvoice Explore, an indoor air quality monitor for residential use with smart-home integration support.[5]
Environmental research and studies
editAirvoice operates an analytical division that publishes data on pollution patterns across India. Its findings have been cited by news platforms and used in public discussions on national environmental policy. In 2025, the company's R&D centre, jointly with the University of Arizona and Nanyang Technological University, presented a physics-informed method for detecting building occupancy from CO2 sensor data at the American Control Conference. In testing on real-world measurements, the accuracy of the proposed algorithm was approximately 95%.[6]
National monitoring infrastructure
editIn March 2026, Airvoice published a study reporting that nearly 40% of India's districts lacked a single government-operated air quality monitoring station.[7] Airvoice CEO Vitalii Matiunin noted that automated monitoring remained unavailable in several states and that significant data was lost due to technical downtime.[8] The findings were reported by multiple national outlets.[9]
Festival-related pollution spikes
editDiwali firecracker emissions
editAn Airvoice study during Diwali recorded an average spike of up to 875% in PM2.5 concentrations due to firecrackers, while observing that atmospheric conditions typically returned to baseline levels within 24 hours in some regions.[10][11] The data was referenced in debates over the relative contribution of firecrackers and stubble burning to winter smog.[12]
New Year celebrations (2024–2025)
editTourist destination air quality
editIn 2024, Airvoice published a study examining air quality conditions at major Indian tourist destinations including Goa, Kashmir, and Shimla.[16] A key finding concerned the declining air quality in Shillong, which the study attributed to rising vehicle numbers associated with growing tourism.[17][18]
See also
editReferences
edit- 1 2 3 4 5 "Advancing air quality data — from measurement to management". Envirotech Online. 2025. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Regulate Indoor Air Quality Now — Col. Ashwini K Channan, CEO, Airvoice India". SustainabilityNext. January 30, 2025. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- 1 2 3 Sharma, Mohit; Ghosh, Suraj; Singh, Mayank; Sahajpal, Ishan (October 2024). Cleaner Air Better Life: Lessons and Learnings of Air Quality Management in Indore (PDF) (Report). CII – Cleaner Air Better Life Technical Report 2021–2023. New Delhi: Confederation of Indian Industry. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- ↑ "Mapping the future of clean air at CEM 2025". Envirotech Online. 2025. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Airvoice Explore Brings Air Quality Monitoring to Every Household". SMEStreet. 2025. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ Esmaieeli-Sikaroudi, A.-M.; Goikhman, B.; Chubarov, D.; Nguyen, H. D.; Chertkov, M.; Vorobev, P. (2025). Physics-Informed Building Occupancy Detection. 2025 American Control Conference (ACC). IEEE. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- ↑ "No govt-operated air quality monitoring station in about 40 pc of India's districts: Study". Press Trust of India. March 31, 2026. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "No govt-operated air quality monitoring station in about 40 per cent of India's districts: Study". The New Indian Express. March 31, 2026. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- ↑ "No govt-operated air quality monitoring station in about 40% of India's districts: Study". CNBC TV18. March 31, 2026. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Diwali Firecrackers Cause PM2.5 Spike, But 'Air Quality Returns To Pre-Festival Level In 24Hrs', Says Study". ABP Live. 2024. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Diwali firecrackers cause 875% spike in pollution, reveals new report". Business Standard. October 22, 2024. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Impact of Diwali firecracker emissions on India's air quality; New Delhi tops the chart of worst AQI". The Times of India. 2024. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Bengaluru, known for moderate AQI, saw bigger PM2.5 spike than Delhi on New Year — study by start-up". The Print. 2025. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Bengaluru saw big pollution spike during New Year celebrations". The New Indian Express. February 1, 2025. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Bengaluru's Usually Clean Air Was Worse Than Delhi's On New Year's Day? Study Explains This Surprising Fact". Times Now. 2025. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "New study highlights air quality at India's top tourist destinations". ET TravelWorld. 2024. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Is the air quality fine in the Scotland of the East?". Hub Network. 2024. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
- ↑ "Meghalaya: Air quality declines in Shillong due to increasing number of vehicles, claims study". India Today NE. August 3, 2024. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
