Samenvatting
Vehicle platooning has been attracting attention recently because of its ability to improve road capacity, safety and fuel efficiency. Vehicles communicate using Vehicle-toVehicle (V2V) wireless communication, making their status (acceleration, position, etc.) available to other vehicles. Shock waves, i.e. zones of reduced traffic speed that propagate upstream, are a well known emergent traffic phenomenon. Since vehicles entering such a zone need to decelerate sharply, shock waves cause a deterioration of fuel economy, driving comfort, and safety. While typically caused by bad driving behavior, recent studies have shown that it is possible to diminish or dissipate shock waves by applying certain good driving behavioral patterns. In this work, we use the information about the traffic situation to adapt the reference speed profile of the platoon we control, in order to mitigate the effect of a shock wave coming from downstream. The platoon leader receives the velocity of the vehicles downstream of the platoon and distance gap between them using V2V communication and it computes the shock wave speed. We show that by doing this we reduce the fuel consumption of the vehicles in the platoon, and improve the traffic situation by helping dissipate the shock wave. We validate our results using microscopic models with the help of a toolchain composed of Matlab, and the SUMO traffic simulator.
Originele taal-2 | Engels |
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Titel | 2019 IEEE Intelligent Transportation Systems Conference, ITSC 2019 |
Plaats van productie | Piscataway |
Uitgeverij | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers |
Pagina's | 1727-1734 |
Aantal pagina's | 8 |
ISBN van elektronische versie | 978-1-5386-7024-8 |
ISBN van geprinte versie | 978-1-5386-7025-5 |
DOI's | |
Status | Gepubliceerd - okt. 2019 |