Josip Miloš, Patrik Hršak, N. Topic, Leon Jakšić, K. Kušić, Filip Vrbanić, E. Ivanjko
{"title":"Influence of Spatial Placement of Variable Speed Limit Zones on Urban Motorway Traffic Control","authors":"Josip Miloš, Patrik Hršak, N. Topic, Leon Jakšić, K. Kušić, Filip Vrbanić, E. Ivanjko","doi":"10.7307/ptt.v34i4.4073","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Traffic control approaches, in particular Variable Speed Limit (VSL), are often studied as solutions to im-prove the level of service on urban motorways. How-ever, the efficiency of VSL strongly depends on the spa-tiotemporal arrangement of VSL zones. It is crucial to determine the length and location of VSL zones for best VSL efficiency before deployment in a real system, as the optimal length of the VSL zone and their distance from the bottleneck directly affects traffic dynamics and, thus, bottleneck control. Therefore, in this study, we perform the analysis of different VSL zones lengths and their po-sitions by using a closed-loop Simple Proportional Speed Controller for VSL (SPSC-VSL). We evaluate the different VSL zone configurations and their impact on traffic flow control and vehicle emissions in a SUMO microscopic simulation on a high traffic demand scenario. The results support the observations of previous researchers on the significant dependence of VSL zone placement on VSL efficiency. Additionally, new data-based (traffic parame-ters and vehicle emissions) evidence of the performance of the SPSC-VSL design are provided regarding the best placement of consecutive VSL zones for motorway bottle-neck control not analysed in previous research.","PeriodicalId":54546,"journal":{"name":"Promet-Traffic & Transportation","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Promet-Traffic & Transportation","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.7307/ptt.v34i4.4073","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"TRANSPORTATION SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Traffic control approaches, in particular Variable Speed Limit (VSL), are often studied as solutions to im-prove the level of service on urban motorways. How-ever, the efficiency of VSL strongly depends on the spa-tiotemporal arrangement of VSL zones. It is crucial to determine the length and location of VSL zones for best VSL efficiency before deployment in a real system, as the optimal length of the VSL zone and their distance from the bottleneck directly affects traffic dynamics and, thus, bottleneck control. Therefore, in this study, we perform the analysis of different VSL zones lengths and their po-sitions by using a closed-loop Simple Proportional Speed Controller for VSL (SPSC-VSL). We evaluate the different VSL zone configurations and their impact on traffic flow control and vehicle emissions in a SUMO microscopic simulation on a high traffic demand scenario. The results support the observations of previous researchers on the significant dependence of VSL zone placement on VSL efficiency. Additionally, new data-based (traffic parame-ters and vehicle emissions) evidence of the performance of the SPSC-VSL design are provided regarding the best placement of consecutive VSL zones for motorway bottle-neck control not analysed in previous research.
期刊介绍:
This scientific journal publishes scientific papers in the area of technical sciences, field of transport and traffic technology.
The basic guidelines of the journal, which support the mission - promotion of transport science, are: relevancy of published papers and reviewer competency, established identity in the print and publishing profile, as well as other formal and informal details. The journal organisation consists of the Editorial Board, Editors, Reviewer Selection Committee and the Scientific Advisory Committee.
The received papers are subject to peer review in accordance with the recommendations for international scientific journals.
The papers published in the journal are placed in sections which explain their focus in more detail. The sections are: transportation economy, information and communication technology, intelligent transport systems, human-transport interaction, intermodal transport, education in traffic and transport, traffic planning, traffic and environment (ecology), traffic on motorways, traffic in the cities, transport and sustainable development, traffic and space, traffic infrastructure, traffic policy, transport engineering, transport law, safety and security in traffic, transport logistics, transport technology, transport telematics, internal transport, traffic management, science in traffic and transport, traffic engineering, transport in emergency situations, swarm intelligence in transportation engineering.
The Journal also publishes information not subject to review, and classified under the following headings: book and other reviews, symposia, conferences and exhibitions, scientific cooperation, anniversaries, portraits, bibliographies, publisher information, news, etc.