Improving traffic flow at a 2-to-1 lane reduction with wirelessly connected, adaptive cruise control vehicles
L. C. Davis

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that wirelessly connected, adaptive cruise control vehicles can significantly improve traffic flow and reduce travel times at a lane reduction bottleneck by delaying congestion and inducing early lane changes.
Contribution
It introduces a control strategy for connected vehicles that reduces congestion and increases flow at a bottleneck, using a stochastic model for manual vehicles and adaptive cruise control algorithms.
Findings
Flow improvement of 52% with 40% connected vehicles
Delayed or eliminated congestion at the bottleneck
Substantially reduced travel times for most vehicles
Abstract
Wirelessly connected vehicles that exchange information about traffic conditions can reduce delays caused by congestion. At a 2-to-1 lane reduction, the improvement in flow past a bottleneck due to traffic with a random mixture of 40% connected vehicles is found to be 52%. Control is based on connected-vehicle-reported velocities near the bottleneck. In response to indications of congestion the connected vehicles, which are also adaptive cruise control vehicles, reduce their speed in slowdown regions. Early lane changes of manually driven vehicles from the terminated lane to the continuous lane are induced by the slowing connected vehicles. Self-organized congestion at the bottleneck is thus delayed or eliminated, depending upon the incoming flow magnitude. For the large majority of vehicles, travel times past the bottleneck are substantially reduced. Control is responsible for delaying…
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