Clustering Strategies of Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control: Impacts on Human-driven Vehicles
As a promising application of connected and automated vehicles (CAVs), Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) is expected to be deployed on the public road in the near term. Thus far the majority of the CACC studies have been focusing on the overall network performance with limited insight on th...
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Zusammenfassung: | As a promising application of connected and automated vehicles (CAVs),
Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) is expected to be deployed on the
public road in the near term. Thus far the majority of the CACC studies have
been focusing on the overall network performance with limited insight on the
potential impact of CAVs on human-driven vehicles (HVs). This paper aims to
quantify the influence of CAVs on HVs by studying the high-resolution vehicle
trajectory data that is obtained from microscopic simulation. Two clustering
strategies for CACC are implemented: an ad hoc coordination one and a local
coordination one. Results show that the local coordination outperforms the ad
hoc coordination across all tested market penetration rates (MPRs) in terms of
network throughput and productivity. The greatest performance difference
between the two strategies is observed at 30% and 40% MPR for throughput and
productivity, respectively. However, the distributions of the hard braking
observations (as a potential safety impact) for HVs change significantly under
local coordination strategy. Regardless of the clustering strategy, CAVs
increase the average lane change frequency for HVs. 30% MPR is the break-even
point for local coordination, after which the average lane change frequency
decreases from the peak 5.42 to 5.38. Such inverse relationship to MPR is not
found in the ah hoc case and the average lane change frequency reaches the
highest 5.48 at 40% MPR. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1909.13204 |