'Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)'
Abstract
This paper simulates, analyzes, and compares, for
two case studies (one synthetic freeway and one real-life freeway),
the behavior of Logic-Based Traffic Flow Control (LB-TFC),
an integrated control strategy for Ramp Metering (RM) installations and Variable Speed Limits (VSLs) that was proposed and
derivated in the first part of the work (‘Part 1: Controller’).
For the first case study, which was presented in the first part
of the work, the control performance of LB-TFC is compared
with the ones obtained with the optimal solution and with
the Mainstream Traffic Flow Control (MTFC) + PI-ALINEA
algorithm. Moreover, the robustness of the considered controllers
is analyzed for this case study concluding that LB-TFC is quite
robust, specially when comparing with MTFC + PI-ALINEA.
For the second study (a stretch of the ring-road freeway SE-30 in
Seville, Spain), data from 10 different days have been used in
order to simulate the performance of the considered controllers
using real data for the afternoon peak period. In order to
properly deal with a bottleneck with a dynamically changing
number of lanes, the equations used for MTFC + PI-ALINEA
have been slightly modified for the second case study. For
both case studies, LB-TFC provides a robust performance that,
in most cases, is close to the optimal one and that improves
the reduction in the Total Time Spent (TTS) obtained with
MTFC + PI-ALINEA. Moreover, this paper studies the tuning
of the control parameters and the advantages and disadvantages
of LB-TFC