Ride the Tide of Traffic Conditions: Opportunistic Driving Improves Energy Efficiency of Timely Truck Transportation

Wenjie Xu, Qingyu Liu, Minghua Chen, Haibo Zeng

Research output: Chapters, Conference Papers, Creative and Literary WorksRGC 32 - Refereed conference paper (with host publication)peer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We study the problem of minimizing fuel consumption of a heavy-duty truck traveling across national highway subject to a deadline, under a practical setting that traversing a road segment is subject to variable speed ranges due to dynamic traffic conditions. The consideration of dynamic traffic conditions not only differentiates our work from existing ones but also allows us to leverage opportunistic driving to improve fuel efficiency. The idea is for the truck to strategically wait (e.g., at highway rest areas) for benign traffic conditions, to traverse subsequent road segments at favorable speeds for saving fuel. We observe that the traffic condition and thus the speed ranges are mostly stationary within certain durations of the day, and we term them as phases where each phase is defined as a time interval with fixed speed ranges. We formulate the fuel consumption minimization problem under phased speed ranges, considering path planning, speed planning, and opportunistic driving. We prove the problem is NP-hard, and develop a dual-subgradient heuristic for instances of the scale of national highway system. We characterize conditions under which the heuristic generates an optimal solution. We carry out simulations based on real-world traces over the US highway system. The results show that our scheme saves up to 26% fuel as compared to shortest-/fastest- path baselines, of which 11% is contributed by opportunistic driving. Meanwhile, opportunistic driving also reduces driving time by 13% as compared to only optimizing path planning and speed planning. As such, opportunistic driving offers a favorable design option to simultaneously reduce fuel consumption and hours of driving. Last but not least, our results highlight a perhaps surprising observation that dynamic traffic conditions can be exploited to achieve fuel savings even larger than those under stationary traffic conditions.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationBuildSys ’19
Subtitle of host publicationProceedings of the 6th ACM International Conference on Systems for Energy-Efficient Buildings, Cities, and Transportation
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery
Pages169-178
ISBN (Print)9781450370059
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2019
Externally publishedYes
Event6th ACM International Conference on Systems for Energy-Efficient Buildings, Cities, and Transportation (BuildSys 2019) - New York, United States
Duration: 13 Nov 201914 Nov 2019
Conference number: 6
https://buildsys.acm.org/2019/
https://dl.acm.org/doi/proceedings/10.1145/3360322

Publication series

NameBuildSys - Proceedings of the ACM International Conference on Systems for Energy-Efficient Buildings, Cities, and Transportation

Conference

Conference6th ACM International Conference on Systems for Energy-Efficient Buildings, Cities, and Transportation (BuildSys 2019)
Abbreviated titleBuildSys
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityNew York
Period13/11/1914/11/19
Internet address

Research Keywords

  • Dynamic traffic conditions
  • Energy-efficient transportation
  • Opportunistic driving
  • Timely transportation
  • Variable speed ranges

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