Analysis of highway performance under mixed connected and regular vehicle environment

Zhao Zhang (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA)
Xianfeng (Terry) Yang (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA)

Journal of Intelligent and Connected Vehicles

ISSN: 2399-9802

Article publication date: 31 July 2021

Issue publication date: 14 September 2021

908

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to study the connected vehicle (CV) impact on highway operational performance under a mixed CV and regular vehicle (RV) environment.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors implemented a mixed traffic flow model, along with a CV speed control model, in the simulation environment. According to the different traffic characteristics between CVs and RVs, this research first analyzed how the operation of CVs can affect highway capacity under both one-lane and multi-lane cases. A hypothesis was then made that there shall exist a critical CV penetration rate that can significantly show the benefit of CV to the overall traffic. To prove this concept, this study simulated the mixed traffic pattern under various conditions.

Findings

The results of this research revealed that performing optimal speed control to CVs will concurrently benefit RVs by improving highway capacity. Furthermore, a critical CV penetration rate should exist at a specified traffic demand level, which can significantly reduce the speed difference between RVs and CVs. The results offer effective insight to understand the potential impacts of different CV penetration rates on highway operation performance.

Originality/value

This approach assumes that there shall exist a critical CV penetration rate that can maximize the benefits of CV implementations. CV penetration rate (the proportion of CVs in mixed traffic) is the key factor affecting the impacts of CV on freeway operational performance. The evaluation criteria for freeway operational performance are using average travel time under different given traffic demand patterns.

Keywords

Citation

Zhang, Z. and Yang, X.(T). (2021), "Analysis of highway performance under mixed connected and regular vehicle environment", Journal of Intelligent and Connected Vehicles, Vol. 4 No. 2, pp. 68-79. https://doi.org/10.1108/JICV-10-2020-0011

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Zhao Zhang and Xianfeng (Terry) Yang.

License

Published in Journal of Intelligent and Connected Vehicles. Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence maybe seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode


1. Introduction

Connected vehicles (CV) are wireless connectivity-enabled vehicles that can communicate with their internal and external environments Lu et al. (2014). Recent advancements of information technologies enable CVs to communicate with each other (V2V), roadside infrastructure (V2I) and the “Cloud” (V2C). Applications of CV technologies can offer great potentials of reshaping current concepts of planning, design and operation, which are expected to benefit transportation networks. For example, CV technology is considered as one of the most promising methods to improve traffic safety, which could dramatically reduce traffic crashes. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), 439,000–615,000 crashes will be prevented after the full implementation of V2V (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration [NHTSA], 2016). Such prediction is supported by a category of studies. For instance, Liu et al. (2017) adopted the Advanced Driver Assistance Systems for improving traffic safety under the CVs environment where vehicles are communicated with roadside infrastructure. Rahman and Abdel-Aty (2018) applied a vehicle behavior model for CV platoon based on the Intelligent Driver Model (IDM) model to evaluate the longitudinal safety of managed-lane CV platoons on expressways based on simulation results. Yang et al. (2017) developed simulation-based modeling and conducted an experimental study. Their results showed that CVs could be a viable way to reduce the risk of secondary crashes.

Besides the safety benefits, CV technologies can also help improve traffic efficiency and stability. Yang et al. (2020) demonstrated that eco-driving and platooning system supported by the advances of connected automated vehicle (CAV) technology can improve both fuel and operational efficiency of vehicles on the freeways. Chen et al. (2017) proposed a theoretical framework to evaluate how CV can change traffic capacity in equilibrium conditions, where shorter gaps between CVs are believed to be the main contributor to highway capacity improvement. Talebpour and Mahmassani (2016) developed a framework that uses different models, with technology-appropriate assumptions, to simulate different vehicle types. Their study revealed that CVs can help improve string stability. Ghiasi et al. (2017) proposed an analytical stochastic formulation to analyze mixed traffic highway capacity, which is affected by CV penetration rate, CV platooning intensity and mixed traffic headway settings. Their results showed the benefits of CV technologies on improving traffic efficiency and were later implemented by (Han et al., 2017; Khondaker and Kattan, 2015; Zhang et al., 2018). On another regard, Wan et al. (2016) and Huang et al. (2018) analyzed the traffic pattern with mixed CVs and regular vehicles (RVs). They also derived optimization models to prove that CVs can help reduce fuel consumption. Furthermore, the effectiveness of CV platoon control has been investigated by Jia and Ngoduy (2016), Hu et al. (2020); Wang et al. (2020), Hao et al. (2020).

In summary, emerging CV technologies offer the potential to use real-time traffic information to improve traffic safety, efficiency and stability. Such benefits are usually achieved by optimal CV speed control, which is fulfilled by the communication between CVs and infrastructure (V2I). In the control loop, infrastructures provide advisory speed to CVs to follow, and CVs send their trajectory data and basic safety message to infrastructure for future feedback operations. In recent years, researchers started using the prediction model in traffic mixed with CVs and RVs. Han et al. (2017) developed variable speed limit (VSL) control strategies with CV technology to improve the discharge rate at recurrent freeway bottlenecks and to reduce system delay. Khondaker and Kattan (2015) proposed a VSL control algorithm with CV for simultaneously achieving mobility, safety and environmental improvements at the microscopic level. Hegyi et al. (2005) modified the METANET macroscopic traffic flow model with VSL control to determine the optimal speed. The effect of VSL was analyzed on aggregated traffic flow behaviors from a theoretical perspective by Papageorgiou et al. (2008) and Carlson et al. (2010). Their simulation results demonstrated that the total travel time is decreased by 15%. Zhang et al. (2018) performed CV speed control on freeways with the sensitivity analysis of different CV penetration rate at the macroscopic level. Therefore, CV technologies, along with properly speed control algorithms, are approved as an effective way of benefiting traffic safety, efficiency and stability.

Notably, although CV technologies will soon go beyond testbeds and be implemented in real-world applications, it is expected that CVs and RVs will co-exist on the road for a long time. Hence, how to understand the interactions between CVs and RVs becomes a vital issue in the traffic control and operation domain. In addition, despite some existing studies proved the effectiveness of improving highway capacity performance by optimally controlling CVs, the penetration rate plays as a key role in affecting the system’s performance. This is explicated by how RV drivers would respond to the speed change of their nearby CVs. Grounded on preliminary simulation studies, it can be observed that RVs will follow CVs in the traffic flow when they have no sufficient gap to make lane-changing (e.g. under congested condition or with a high CV penetration rate). In such cases, the speed control of CVs will greatly affect RVs’ speeds in the meantime. However, under the conditions of light traffic or low CV rates, RVs can easily change lanes to avoid following CVs. The CVs are advised to slow down, it may even increase the potential crash rate due to increased lane-changing maneuvers. Therefore, given a congestion level, there should exist a critical CV penetration rate that can fully demonstrate the benefit of CV impact.

Grounded on our developed macroscopic mixed traffic flow and CV speed optimization model (Zhang et al., 2018), this paper intends to explore the existence of critical CV penetration rate and study its impact to the freeway operational performance. More specifically, this study analyzes the freeway traffic flow characteristics under a mixed CV and RV environment. To understand the CV impact to the overall traffic flow, this study simulates the mixed traffic pattern with different CV penetration rates and various traffic demands levels. Considering the different driving characteristics of CVs and RVs, our research firstly analyzes how the implementation of CVs can affect highway capacity under both one-lane and multi-lane cases. The simulation results reveal that performing optimal speed control to CVs will concurrently benefit RVs due to their interactions in the mixed traffic streams. The highway capacity will consequently be increased. Also, given a demand pattern on a target freeway segment, it exists a critical CV penetration rate that can significantly reduce the speed difference between RVs and CVs. With the increase of traffic demand volumes, such a critical CV rate intends to be a smaller value. Those results could offer effective insight for traffic operators to better understand the potential impacts of different CV penetration rates on highway capacity.

The rest of the paper is organized as follows: Section 2 will discuss the research background and illustrate the problem of nature to be solved; following sections offer an overview of the control model and extensive simulation studies to identify the critical CV penetration rates under various scenarios; research findings, conclusions and future research direction are then summarized in the last section.

2. Highway capacity under connected vehicles impact

In the literature, many recent research efforts have been attracted to CV-related optimal control. Meanwhile, a similar concept but for RVs only, named VSL control, has also been studied extensively in the literature. By dynamically changing the displayed speed limit, VSL is initially developed to reduce the rear-end collisions and improve traffic safety by decreasing the speed difference on freeway segments (Steel et al., 2005; Ulfarsson et al., 2005). Later researches have further explored its potential for improving traffic efficiency and stability, and both reactive and proactive control models are derived (Kang et al., 2004; Kwon et al., 2007; Abdel-Aty et al., 2006; Abdel-Aty et al., 2008; Yang et al., 2017; Lyu et al., 2017). Different from VSL control, which typically assumes homogenous vehicles in the traffic, CV-based control models are usually operated under mixed traffic patterns. Hence, how RVs will react to the speed change of CVs becomes a vital issue that is worthy of exploration. For proof-of-concept, our research team has conducted a simulation study at an intersection to investigate the impact of CV control on the traffic stream.

Figure 1 shows the vehicle speed distribution under two simulation cases. Case 1 was simulated with mixed traffic containing both CVs and RVs, while Case 2 was simulated with RVs only. In case 1, optimal speed control is performed on CVs to smooth traffic speed transition from the upstream high-speed segment to the downstream low-speed segment. The result comparisons indicate that despite speed control is only performed on CVs, the average speed of RVs would also be reduced as they are sharing the road. However, the speed difference between CVs and RVs can still be observed. Hence, a conclusion can be drawn that speed control of CVs can impact the speed of nearby RVs. However, the significance of such impact may subject to the congestion level and CV penetration rate. In this study, our research team would conduct further research to analyze this critical issue, named CV impact.

According to existing studies, the application of CV technologies can improve highway capacity and efficiency (Chen et al. (2017); Abdulsattar et al., 2020; Ghiasi et al., 2017). Chen et al. (2017) conducted a comprehensive study to show how CV improve highway capacity and efficiency at a macroscopic level. They found that capacity related to CV penetration rate, platoon size, inter-vehicle spacing and lane policies and traffic mixed with CVs and RVs can lead to higher capacity and strict segregation of CVs and RVs will bring lower capacity. Based on the extended analysis, they get the conclusion that CVs use the most efficient lanes on highway lead to make the best use of roadway efficiency and gain the highest capacity. On the contrary, Ghiasi et al. (2017) came the opposite conclusion, based on the analytical stochastic formulation for mixed traffic highway capacity, higher CV penetration rates and platooning intensities not always improve highway capacity. Therefore, the CV penetration rate (Chen et al., 2017; Ghiasi et al., 2017; Bansal and Kockelman, 2017; Chen et al., 2016; Lavasani et al., 2016) need to be further analyzed to understand how it can impact on highway capacity and efficiency.

For the convenience of discussion, this study selects a single-lane highway and a two-lane highway for study. For a single-lane highway segment, its capacity can be estimated by the inter-vehicle spacing. Many existing studies (Ahn et al., 2004; Newell, 2002) defined this spacing is the distance between the reference points of an immediate follower and its leader, such as from the front bumper to the front bumper. The spacing is shown in Figure 2, S0 denotes the spacing between RVs; S1 indicates the spacing between RV and CV (CV ahead); S2 denotes the spacing between CV; and S3 denotes the spacing between CV and RV (RV ahead). By assuming both CVs and RVs drive at a constant free-flow speed and based on the previous study finished by Chen et al. (2017), the relations among all types of spacings can express as S2 < S0 < S3 < S1. It means the CV can save inter-vehicle spacing, which further indicates that CV can help improve roadway capacity.

Such phenomenon can be further proved in the fundamental diagram, as shown in Figure 3, where C0 denotes lane capacity with RVs only; C1 denotes lane capacity with RVs and CVs; q denotes the traffic flow; u0 denotes the free-flow speed until reaching critical capacity with RVs only; u1 denotes the free-flow speed until reaching critical capacity with RVs and CVs; w0 denotes the free-flow speed until reaching congested with RVs only; w1 denotes the free-flow speed until reaching congested with RVs and CVs; and d denotes the corresponding density under these two different traffic environment. With reduced vehicle spacing, it can be observed in Figure 3 that the highway capacity with mixed with CVs and RVs is higher than the case with RVs only.

For a two-lane highway segment, the capacity estimation under CV impact becomes more complicated and is subject to many factors. However, on a multi-lane highway segment, RVs can choose to make lane-changing when it follows a slow CV. Figure 4(a) illustrates a case that CVs are traveling at a lower speed compared with RVs. Due to the light traffic condition, RVs can easily pass CVs by making a few lane-changing maneuvers. Hence, the impact of CV speed control on the entire traffic flow is quite minimal in such cases. In contrast, Figure 4(b) shows a congested highway segment where RVs have to follow CVs due to the difficulty of making lane-changing. Under such conditions, it can be expected that CVs’ speed control can greatly affect the entire traffic.

From the microscopic level, moving of traffic streams can be characterized by both car-following models and lane-changing models. Under the mixed CV and RV pattern, car-following behaviors can be categorized as four categories: CV follows CV, CV follows RV, RV follows CV, and RV follows RV. Similar to the case of the one-lane highway, the main variation of these four following scenarios is the different minimum following spacing. For modeling the discretionary lane-changing behaviors, a probabilistic form has been widely used in existing simulation tools, where the probability is subject to the lane speed variations and the number of safe lane-changing gaps. Applying the same logic to analyze the mixed CV and RV traffic pattern, it can be concluded that more RV lane-changing behaviors may be observed if CVs are operated at lower speeds; and the number of safe lane-changing gaps is sufficient. Therefore, given the CV optimal speed control pattern and highway traffic demand profile, there shall exist a critical CV penetration rate that can maximize the CV impact on the traffic flow without increasing lane-changing significantly.

3. Macroscopic mixed traffic flow with cv optimization model

To analyze the impact of CV optimal speed control on the mixed traffic pattern, this study implements a macroscopic mixed traffic flow with CV optimization model developed by Zhang et al. (2018), which consists of two main functions: macroscopic traffic state estimation and CV speed optimization.

3.1 Macroscopic mixed traffic state estimation

Under mixed CV and RV traffic conditions, one of the most challenging issues in traffic state estimation is how to capture the interactions between CVs and RVs. For example, V2I communication platform can facilitate the information change between vehicles and infrastructures. From the operation aspect, V2I will provide enriched traffic data such as CV trajectories to support the real-time control needs. On the other regards, the control module can send advisory speeds to the CVs for the benefit of improving freeway operational efficiency. However, such CV speed control will impact nearby RVs as they are sharing the roads. Then a vital question raised here is how RVs will response to the speed change of CVs. Based on the simulations conducted in the literature, it can be expected that RVs’ behaviors would be subject to the traffic congestion level and CV penetration rates.

To model the mixed traffic flow pattern, this study is based on a macroscopic traffic flow model proposed by Papageorgiou et al. (1990) that can function to predict future traffic state (speeds, flow and density). However, such a conventional traffic flow model may fall short of effectiveness as speed control is placed on CVs because it analyzed all vehicles as a group in each freeway subsegment. Meanwhile, operation of CVs would affect RVs’ speeds because they are sharing the road. To overcome such issues, Yang et al. (2020) extended the macroscopic model by dividing vehicles into two different classes. Assume the case of two vehicle classes (e.g. CVs and RVs) without loss of generality, the variation of traffic characteristic between different classes of vehicles can be described as follows:

(1) dj,ik+1=dj,ik+ΔTLiλi[qj,i,ink-qj,i,outk+rj,ik-sj,ik] 
where dj,i(k) denotes the density of class j vehicles for segment i at time step k; ΔT denotes the length of update time interval; Li denotes the length of segment i; λi denotes the number of lanes of segment i; qj,i,in(k) denotes the flow rate of class j vehicles entering segment i from upstream segment i between steps (k, k + 1); qj,i,out(k) denotes the flow rate of class j vehicles leaving segment i to downstream segment i between steps (k, k + 1); rj,i(k) denote the flow rate of class j vehicles entering segment i from on-ramps between steps (k, k + 1); sj,i(k) denotes the flow rate of class j vehicles leaving segment i from off-ramps between steps (k, k + 1).

And the flow transition between adjacent segments is as follows:

(2) qj,i,ink=qj,i-1,outk
(3) qj,i,ink=qj,i-1,outk

By defining:

(4) Vj,idj,i(k)=uf,jiexp-1ajid1,ik+d2,ikdcr,jiaji
where uf,ji denotes the free-flow speed of segment i for class j vehicles; a,ji denotes the speed exponent term of segment i for class j vehicles; dcr,ji denotes the critical density of segment i for class j vehicles.

The mean speed of RVs within each segment can be estimated by:

(5) u1,ik+1=uk+ΔTτi+ΔTLiu1,iku1,i-1k-u1,ik-γiΔTτiLid1,i+1k+d2,i+1k-d1,ik-d2,ikd1,ik+d2,ik-βiΔTτiV1,ik-V2,ik

Similarly, the mean speed of CVs can be obtained with:

(6) u2,ik+1=u2,ik+ΔTτiV2,ik-u2,ik+ΔTLiu2,iku2,i-1k-u2,ik-γiΔTτiLid1,i+1k+d2,i+1k-d1,ik-d2,ikd1,ik+d2,ik
where uj,i(k) denotes the mean speed of class j vehicles for segment i at time step k; Vj[dj,i(k)] denotes the static speed of class j vehicles for segment i at time k with respect to the density of class j vehicles; τi,γi,κi,βi denotes the parameters in the dynamic speed equations of segment i. And the following equations hold:
(7) qj,ik=λidj,ikuj,ik

Notably, the interaction between RVs and CVs is represented by the speed difference between CVs and RVs. In equation (5), a set of parameters βi was introduced into the term to reflect how CVs’ speed will impact RVs’ speed. Then the flowing equations are used for restricting equation (6) to represent the flow of CV and RV on the segment with V2I communication:

(8) q1,i,ink=1-αiq1,i-1,outk+q2,i-1,outk
(9) q2,i,ink=αiq1,i-1,outk+q2,i-1,outk
where, αi denotes the penetration rate of CV.

3.2 Connected vehicles optimization model

Grounded on the macroscopic mixed traffic state estimation model, an optimization function will provide optimal advisory speeds to CVs via V2I communications. The embedded optimization model has the following objective of minimizing the function of total travel time over the controlled segment:

(10) minλid1,ik+d2,ikΔT

For implementing the optimization model and select the proper control speed for the projected control period, the following constraints should be placed:

(11) ujamuj,ikuf,ji,         segment i without coverage of V2Iujamuj,ikuf,jivik,    segment i with V2I communications        
(12) 0<vi(k)1
(13) 0dj,idjam
(14) -δuf,jivik-uf,jivi(k-1)δ
where δ denotes that maximum speed variation of CVs between two consecutive time slots.

4. Freeway performance study

4.1 Simulation network

This study selects a typical two-lane freeway as an example for analysis. As shown in Figure 5, the freeway stretch is divided into eight segments, and the total length is 4 km. There is one on-ramp on 3rd segment and one off-ramp on 5th segment. Then the macroscopic traffic flow model is implemented to simulate the mixed traffic flow pattern when CVs follow the optimal advisory speeds. The model parameters are set up based on the existing study finished by Wang and Papageorgiou (2008). τ,ν,κ,δ, uf, dcr a is set to 20 s, 35 km2/h, 13 veh/km/lane, 1.4, 120 km/h, 33.5 veh/km and 1.4324, respectively.

To fully study the CV impact on the RVs, this study has simulated the mixed traffic flow under various traffic patterns, as shown in Table 1. The 1,500 veh/h is set up for mimicking the free flow environment and 4,000 veh/h is set up for simulating the congestion environment. Between these two traffic demand conditions, we set 500 increments as a new case to learn the CV impact in the traffic stream. Furthermore, under a given traffic demand pattern, we set 5% increments of CV penetration rate between 5% and 80% to learn the CV impact in the traffic stream.

In equation (5), CV speed impact on RV groups is represented by the key factor βi. Notably, the value of the factor shall be subject to both demand levels and CV ratios. Follow the similar procedure of existing study Bansal and Kockelman (2017), βi is calibrated with microscopic simulations and the corresponding value within different simulation scenarios is shown in Figure 6.

4.2 Performance index

To evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed model, average travel time (TT) under different given traffic demand patterns is used to analyze the simulation results.

(15) TT =i=1nLui(k)  n  
where L denotes the length of each freeway subsegment; ui(k) denotes the mean speed of segment i at time step k; n denotes the number of subsegment.

4.3 Connected vehicles impact analysis

Selecting average travel time of all vehicles along the studied freeway segment as the performance index, this study has adopted the Monte Carlo simulation technique to evaluate the freeway performance. All designed scenarios are shown in Table 1, and the results are summarized in Figure 7. By comparing the cases of different CV penetration rates, it can be observed that the average travel time will be reduced with the increasing of CV penetration rate, which proves the benefit of implementing CV technology. Notably, at the low demand level, such benefit is not significant. For example, with the 1,500 veh/h traffic demand, the corresponding travel times of 5% and 80% CV ratios are obtained as 129.1 s and 121.4 s, respectively. In the contrast, in the cases with 4,000 veh/h upstream arriving flow, the travel time difference by these two CV ratios is 18 s. Hence, under a more congested traffic environment, the optimal CV speed control system can yield more benefits on reducing vehicle delays. However, it shall be noted that all scenarios are simulated at the under-saturated condition. When traffic demand exceeds freeway capacity, the operational benefits by CVs may be minimized.

To study the CV impact on RVs and understand their interactions, this research also compared the travel time performance of four different vehicle groups:

  1. all vehicles without CV involved;

  2. all vehicles with CV optimal control;

  3. CVs under optimal speed control; and

  4. RVs under CV optimal control.

Figure 8 presents the resulting average travel time under different CV rates and demand levels. By comparing the cases under CV control with the ones without CVs, it can be noted that providing advisory speeds to CVs can help reduce the travel time of the entire traffic stream. Also, CVs experienced much lower travel time compared with RVs in all scenarios. With the increasing CV penetration rate, the reduction of CV travel time is quite minimal under low demand conditions. With higher upstream traffic flow, the optimal CV speed harmonization will yield more travel time reduction when CV ratio increased. In addition, a further performance comparison between CV and RV groups revealed that the CV impact, indicated by RV travel time reduction along with CV optimal control, becomes more significant when the system involving a larger portion of CVs. There is a critical CV penetration rate under each level of demand that can greatly reduce the speed difference between CVs and RVs. Based on Figure 8 (a)–(f), the critical CV rates under various demand patterns and corresponding average travel time of different vehicle groups are summarized in Table 2.

To better illustrate the existence of critical CV penetration rate and demonstrate how it can impact highway performance, Figure 9 summarizes the reduced average travel time of all vehicles under different scenarios, compared with the cases of no CV control. Notably, under each level of demand, the travel time reduction suddenly becomes significant after the CV ratio reached the critical value. After passing the critical CV rates, the average travel time will keep reducing with the increase of CV rates. However, under the low demand scenarios, such travel time reduction is not significant.

To further analyze the CV speed impact on RVs under critical CV rate conditions, Figure 10 (a)–(f) presents the time-dependent travel time of all traffic, CVs and RVs. In each case, the travel time of all traffic generated the highest travel time when CV optimal control is unavailable, on the contrary, the travel time of CV obtained the lowest travel time because the CVs with optimal speed control. The travel time of all traffic under control is dramatically decreased because optimal speed control is performed on CVs within the mixed CV and RV traffic pattern. It is indicated that CV optimal control can help reduce the travel time of both CVs and RVs. Also, RVs have very similar travel time compared with CVs. Hence, one can conclude that RVs were very likely to follow CVs within the traffic flow when CV rate reached a critical value under each level of demand.

In summary, we can summarize the following key findings based on the comprehensive simulation analysis:

  • within the mixed CV and RV traffic pattern, performing optimal speed control to CVs will concurrently benefit RVs because they are sharing the roadway;

  • given a demand pattern on a target freeway segment, there should exist a critical CV penetration rate that can greatly improve the performance of CV-based control systems;

  • once the CV penetration rate reached the critical value, the speed difference between RVs and CVs will become insignificant;

  • mixed traffic under high demand level (but still below the capacity) intends to have smaller critical CV rate compared with the case under low demand level.

Notably, although this study has used numerical tests to show the existence of a critical CV penetration rate and indicated its value was subject to demand levels, it is essential to complete theoretical proof in future studies. Also, more simulation and field studies shall be conducted to provide guidance on how to determine the critical CV ratio to maximize the highway capacity.

5. Discussion

This study demonstrated that the CV impact on highway operational performance by a developed macroscopic mixed traffic flow with CV optimization model under mixed traffic with CVs and RVs simulation environment. The study results indicate that there should exist a critical CV penetration rate that can greatly improve highway operational performance. The macroscopic mixed traffic flow with CV optimization model is developed based on the traditional traffic flow model developed by Papageorgiou et al. (2008). To make the developed model could simulate the CV impact on the traffic flow and easy to implement, the influence of the CVs is added to the model with an adjustable factor βi. The most significant improvement of this model due to more simulation function can be achieved. However, there are still a few limitations that need to be overcome.

5.1 Microscopic influence between connected vehicles and regular vehicles

This research study the influence between CV and RV with different CV penetration rate from the macroscopic level. It cannot take the CV impact on the traffic flow into account from the microscopic level, such as lane-changing, acceleration, deceleration, etc. In this paper, the CV impact is considered only on the macroscopic level, which is intuitive and easy to implement. In future research, we will keep improving the model structure by taking more factors into account.

5.2 Real-world implementation

In this paper, the model is only implemented under simulation environment, which lacks the real-world data to calibrate the parameter. The parameter calibrating is the most challenging part of a traffic flow model’s real applications, which can be solved in the future when more CVs drive on the road.

6. Conclusions

The purpose of this study is to study the CV impact on highway operational performance under a mixed CV and RV environment. As expected that CVs and RVs will co-exist on the transportation network in a long period. It is critical to understand how optimal speed control of CVs will affect the behaviors of nearby RVs. According to the different traffic characteristics between CVs and RVs, our research firstly analyzed how the CVs’ implementation can affect highway capacity under both one-lane and multi-lane cases. A hypothesis was then made that there shall exist a critical CV penetration rate that can maximize the benefits of CV implementations. To prove this concept with numerical analysis, this study implemented a macroscopic mixed traffic flow model along with an embedded CV speed optimization function to simulate the mixed traffic pattern under various conditions. The simulation results revealed that performing optimal speed control to CVs will concurrently benefit RVs due to their interactions in the traffic streams. The highway capacity will consequently be increased. Also, given a demand pattern on a target freeway segment, there should exist a critical CV penetration rate that can significantly reduce the speed difference between RVs and CVs. With the increase of traffic demand volumes, such critical CV rate intends to be smaller on the same freeway sketch.

Future research directions include:

  • develop theoretical methods to model the CV impact within the traffic stream;

  • prove the existence of critical CV penetration rate that can maximize the CV implementation benefits; and

  • produce either close-formed equations or guidelines to estimate highway capacity under mixed CV and RV environment.

Figures

Time-dependent speed distribution of vehicles

Figure 1

Time-dependent speed distribution of vehicles

Inter-vehicle spacing in traffic mixed with CV and RV

Figure 2

Inter-vehicle spacing in traffic mixed with CV and RV

Fundamental diagram with RV only and mixed with CV and RV

Figure 3

Fundamental diagram with RV only and mixed with CV and RV

(a) Light traffic with CVs (b) congested traffic with CVs

Figure 4

(a) Light traffic with CVs (b) congested traffic with CVs

Stretch of the studied freeway

Figure 5

Stretch of the studied freeway

The distribution of in different scenarios

Figure 6

The distribution of in different scenarios

Freeway average travel time under different scenarios

Figure 7

Freeway average travel time under different scenarios

Average travel time comparison between different vehicle groups

Figure 8

Average travel time comparison between different vehicle groups

Reduced average travel time under different scenarios and critical CV rates

Figure 9

Reduced average travel time under different scenarios and critical CV rates

Time-dependent travel time under different levels of demand

Figure 10

Time-dependent travel time under different levels of demand

Table 1 Mixed traffic flow simulation scenarios

Demand level (two lanes) CV penetration rate CV flows (two lanes)
1,500 veh/h 5%–80% with 5% increment 75–1,200 veh/hr
2,000 veh/h 5%–80% with 5% increment 100–1,600 veh/hr
2,500 veh/h 5%–80% with 5% increment 125–2,000 veh/hr
3,000 veh/h 5%–80% with 5% increment 150–2,400 veh/hr
3,500 veh/h 5%–80% with 5% increment 175–2,800 veh/hr
4,000 veh/h 5%–80% with 5% increment 200–3,200 veh/hr

The simulation results of the scenarios with critical cv ratio

Demand level 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000
Critical CV ratio (%) 60 50 40 35 30 20
All traffic TT with no CV 130.08 134.20 139.60 147.01 157.92 179.17
All traffic TT with CV 121.92 126.27 131.98 139.14 149.37 168.34
TT of CV 121.28 125.05 129.96 136.55 146.06 163.27
TT of RV 122.86 127.49 133.36 140.59 150.85 169.72
TT difference between CV and RV (%) 1.3 2.4 3.4 4 4.7 6.4

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Acknowledgements

This research is supported by MPC-590 – Impact of Connected Vehicle Technology on Traffic Safety under Different Highway Geometric Designs.

Corresponding author

Xianfeng Yang can be contacted at: x.yang@utah.edu

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