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Model‐based control strategy for oversaturated traffic regimes based on the LWR‐IM traffic model
Author(s) -
Ng Kok Mun,
Reaz Mamun Bin Ibne,
Mohd Ali Mohd Alauddin
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
iet intelligent transport systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.579
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1751-9578
pISSN - 1751-956X
DOI - 10.1049/iet-its.2018.5381
Subject(s) - platoon , queue , intersection (aeronautics) , upstream (networking) , traffic flow (computer networking) , throughput , computer science , traffic simulation , simulation , truck , control (management) , real time computing , transport engineering , engineering , computer network , automotive engineering , telecommunications , artificial intelligence , wireless
Model‐based optimal control strategies were capable of handling saturated traffic regimes with the ability to maintain optimised network performance. However, the upstream queue spillback which was not considered by these strategies renders an inefficient handling of oversaturated traffic regime. Hence, oversaturated situations needs both traffic flow coordination and queue spillback regulation. Here, the author aims to regulate oversaturated regimes with model‐based control strategy (MCS) based on the Lighthill‐Whitham‐Richards–integrated model (LWR‐IM) traffic model. A traffic simulator which was developed in a previous work is further extended with the proposed MCS. The MCS comprised of a rolling horizon network prediction and control algorithms at both the network and intersection levels. Based on future predictions of platoon sizes, arrival times, and queues; phase durations are adjusted at the intersection level by employing a proportionate methodology in responding to the incoming platoons and a regulation strategy to handle queue spillback. The proposed MCS was tested on real‐world traffic via simulations to assess its performance compared to existing fixed‐time system. The MCS improved the average delays and network throughput significantly and manage to keep queues from spilling back upstream. In addition, the strategy is feasible for real‐time implementation.

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