4.7 Article

On the application of variational theory to urban networks

Journal

TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART B-METHODOLOGICAL
Volume 150, Issue -, Pages 435-456

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trb.2021.06.019

Keywords

Variational theory; Network modelling; Kinematic wave theory; LWR model; Traffic flow theory

Funding

  1. research project MobiDig: Mobilitat Digital Hochfranken - German Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure
  2. NYUAD Center for Interacting Urban Networks (CITIES), UAE - Tamkeen under the NYUAD Research Institute Award [CG001]
  3. Swiss Re Institute, UAE under the Quantum CitiesTM initiative
  4. ETH Research Grant under the project name SPEED [ETH-27 16-1]

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A framework based on VT has been developed to consider source terms and spillbacks at the network level, modeling complex traffic situations and fitting well with microscopic simulation results, albeit with significantly lower computational costs.
The well-known Lighthill-Whitham-Richards (LWR) theory is the fundamental pillar for most macroscopic traffic models. In the past, many methods were developed to numerically derive solutions for LWR problems. Examples for such numerical solution schemes are the cell transmission model, the link transmission model, and the variational theory (VT) of traffic flow. So far, the eulerian formulation of VT found applications in the fields of traffic modelling, macroscopic fundamental diagram estimation, multi-modal traffic analyses, and data fusion. However, these studies apply VT only at the link or corridor level. To the best of our knowledge, there is no methodology yet to apply VT at the network level. We address this gap by developing a VT-based framework applicable to networks. Our model allows us to account for source terms (e.g. inflows and outflows at intersections) and the propagation of spillbacks between adjacent corridors consistent with kinematic wave theory (KWT). We show that the trajectories extracted from a microscopic simulation fit the predicted traffic states from our model for a simple intersection with both source terms and spillbacks. We also use this simple example to illustrate the accuracy of the proposed model, and the ability to model complex bottlenecks. Additionally, we apply our model to the Sioux Falls network and again compare the results to those from a microscopic KWT simulation. Our results indicate a close fit of traffic states, but with substantially lower computational cost. The developed methodology is useful for extending existing VT applications to the network level, for network-wide traffic state estimations in real-time, or other applications within a model-based optimization framework.

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