Freeway work zones with lane closures can adversely affect mobility, safety, and sustainability. Capacity drop phenomena near work zone areas can further decrease work zone capacity and exacerbate traffic congestion. To mitigate the negative impacts caused by freeway work zones, many variable speed limits (VSL) control methods have been proposed to proactively regulate the traffic flow. However, a simple yet robust VSL controller that considers the nonlinearity induced by the associated capacity drop is still needed. Also, most existing studies of VSL control neglected the impacts of traffic sensor failures that commonly occur in transportation systems. Large deviations of traffic measurements caused by sensor faults can greatly affect the reliability of VSL controllers.
To address the aforementioned challenges, this research proposes a fault-tolerant VSL controller for a freeway work zone with consideration of sensor faults. A traffic flow model was developed to understand and describe the traffic dynamics near work zone areas. Then a VSL controller based on sliding mode control was designed to generate dynamic speed limits in real time using traffic measurements. To achieve VSL control fault tolerance, analytical redundancy was exploited to develop an observer-based method and an interacting multiple model with a pseudo-model set (IMMP) based method for permanent and recurrent sensor faults respectively. The proposed system was evaluated under realistic freeway work zone conditions using the traffic simulator SUMO.
This research contributes to the body of knowledge by developing fault-tolerant VSL control for freeway work zones with reliable performance under permanent and recurrent sensor faults. With reliable sensor fault diagnosis, the fault-tolerant VSL controller can consistently reduce travel time, safety risks, emissions, and fuel consumption. Therefore, with a growing number of work zones due to aging road infrastructure and increasing demand, the proposed system offers broader impacts through congestion mitigation and consistent improvements in mobility, safety, and sustainability near work zones. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Freeway work zones can increase congestion with higher travel time, safety risk, emissions and fuel consumption. This research aims to improve traffic conditions near work zones using a variable speed limits control system. By exploiting redundant traffic information, a variable speed limit control system that is insensitive to traffic sensor failures is presented. The proposed system was evaluated under realistic freeway work zone conditions in a simulation environment. The results show that the proposed system can reliably detect sensor failures and consistently provide improvements in mobility, safety and sustainability despite the presence of traffic sensor failures.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/26063 |
Date | January 2020 |
Creators | Du, Shuming |
Contributors | Razavi, Saiedeh, Civil Engineering |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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