Dissipation of stop-and-go waves via control of autonomous vehicles: Field experiments

Jan 1, 2018·
Raphael E. Stern
,
Shumo Cui
,
Maria Laura Delle Monache
Rahul Bhadani
Rahul Bhadani
Matt Bunting
Matt Bunting
,
Miles Churchill
,
Nathaniel Hamilton
,
R’mani Haulcy
,
Hannah Pohlmann
,
Fangyu Wu
,
Benedetto Piccoli
,
Benjamin Seibold
Jonathan Sprinkle
Jonathan Sprinkle
Dan Work
Dan Work
· 1 min read
Type
Publication
Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies
publications

Traffic waves are phenomena that emerge when the vehicular density exceeds a critical threshold. Considering the presence of increasingly automated vehicles in the traffic stream, a number of research activities have focused on the influence of automated vehicles on the bulk traffic flow. In the present article, we demonstrate experimentally that intelligent control of an autonomous vehicle is able to dampen stop-and-go waves that can arise even in the absence of geometric or lane changing triggers. Precisely, our experiments on a circular track with more than 20 vehicles show that traffic waves emerge consistently, and that they can be dampened by controlling the velocity of a single vehicle in the flow. We compare metrics for velocity, braking events, and fuel economy across experiments. These experimental findings suggest a paradigm shift in traffic management: flow control will be possible via a few mobile actuators (less than 5%) long before a majority of vehicles have autonomous capabilities.

Authors
Rahul Bhadani
Authors
PhD Student
Matt Bunting
Authors
Research Scientist
Dr. Matthew Bunting is a Research Scientist at the Institute for Software Integrated Systems at Vanderbilt University. He joined Vanderbilt in 2022 having previously been a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Arizona from 2020-2022. His research is in embedded control software and visualization for cyber-physical systems.
Authors
Jonathan Sprinkle
Authors
Professor and Chair of Computer Science
Professor of Computer Science at Vanderbilt University. Research in cyber-physical systems, autonomous vehicles, and domain-specific modeling.
Dan Work
Authors
Professor
Dan Work is a Chancellor Faculty Fellow and professor in civil and environmental engineering, computer science, and the Institute for Software Integrated Systems at Vanderbilt University.