A hierarchical approach for splitting truck platoons near network discontinuities

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Aurelien Duret - , Gustave Eiffel University (Author)
  • Meng Wang - , Delft University of Technology (Author)
  • Andres Ladino - , Gustave Eiffel University (Author)

Abstract

Truck platooning has attracted substantial attention due to its pronounced benefits in saving energy and promising business model in freight transportation. However, one prominent challenge for the successful implementation of truck platooning is the safe and efficient interaction with surrounding traffic, especially at network discontinuities where mandatory lane changes may lead to the decoupling of truck platoons. This contribution puts forward an efficient method for splitting a platoon of vehicles near network merges. A model-based bi-level control strategy is proposed. A supervisory tactical strategy based on a first-order car-following model with bounded acceleration is designed to maximize the flow at merge discontinuities. The decisions taken at this level include optimal vehicle order after the merge, new equilibrium gaps of automated trucks at the merging point, and anticipation horizon that the platoon members start to track the new equilibrium gaps. The lower-level operational layer uses a third-order longitudinal dynamics model to compute the optimal truck accelerations so that new equilibrium gaps are created when merging vehicles start to change lane and the transient maneuvers are efficient, safe and comfortable. The tactical decisions are derived from an analytic car-following model and the operational accelerations are controlled via model predictive control with guaranteed stability. Simulation experiments are provided in order to test the feasibility and demonstrate the performance and robustness of the proposed strategy.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)627-646
Number of pages20
JournalTransportation Research Procedia
Volume38
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

Conference

Title23rd International Symposium on Transportation and Traffic Theory, ISTTT 2019
Duration24 - 26 July 2018
CityLausanne
CountrySwitzerland

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0001-6555-5558/work/189288312

Keywords

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Keywords

  • Cooperative merging, Cooperative systems, Hierarchical control, Model predictive control, Traffic flow model, Truck platooning