DocumentCode :
4274
Title :
Linear and Weakly Nonlinear Stability Analyses of Cooperative Car-Following Models
Author :
Monteil, Julien ; Billot, Romain ; Sau, Jacques ; El Faouzi, Nour-Eddin
Author_Institution :
Authority of Quality of the Transp. Services (AQST), Minist. of Ecology, Sustainable Dev., & Energy, La Défense, France
Volume :
15
Issue :
5
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Oct. 2014
Firstpage :
2001
Lastpage :
2013
Abstract :
Stability analyses have been widely used to better understand the mechanism of traffic jam formation. In this paper, we consider the impact of cooperative systems (a.k.a. connected vehicles) on traffic dynamics and, more precisely, on flow stability. Cooperative systems are emerging technologies enabling communication between vehicles and/or with the infrastructure. In a distributed communication framework, equipped vehicles are able to send and receive information to/from other equipped vehicles. Here, the effects of cooperative traffic are modeled through a general bilateral multianticipative car-following law that improves cooperative drivers´ perception of their surrounding traffic conditions within a given communication range. Linear stability analyses are performed for a broad class of car-following models. They point out different stability conditions in both multianticipative and nonmultianticipative situations. To better understand what happens in unstable conditions, information on the shock wave structure is studied in the weakly nonlinear regime by the mean of the reductive perturbation method. The shock wave equation is obtained for generic car-following models by deriving the Korteweg de Vries equations. We then derive traffic-state-dependent conditions for the sign of the solitary wave (soliton) amplitude. This analytical result is verified through simulations. Simulation results confirm the validity of the speed estimate. The variation of the soliton amplitude as a function of the communication range is provided. The performed linear and weakly nonlinear analyses help justify the potential benefits of vehicle-integrated communication systems and provide new insights supporting the future implementation of cooperative systems.
Keywords :
Korteweg-de Vries equation; cooperative systems; linear systems; nonlinear equations; perturbation techniques; road traffic control; road vehicles; solitons; stability; Korteweg de Vries equations; bilateral multianticipative car-following law; connected vehicles; cooperative car-following models; cooperative drivers perception; cooperative systems; cooperative traffic; distributed communication framework; equipped vehicles; flow stability; generic car-following model; nonlinear stability analysis; reductive perturbation method; shock wave equation; shock wave structure; solitary wave amplitude; soliton amplitude; speed estimate; stability conditions; traffic conditions; traffic dynamics; traffic jam formation; traffic-state-dependent condition; vehicle-integrated communication systems; Analytical models; Dispersion; Equations; Mathematical model; Solitons; Stability analysis; Vehicles; Connected vehicles; Korteweg de Vries (KdV) equation; cooperative systems; linear stability analysis; solitary waves; weakly nonlinear stability analysis;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Intelligent Transportation Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1524-9050
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TITS.2014.2308435
Filename :
6814939
Link To Document :
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