Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8081/xmlui/handle/123456789/15675
Title: DEVELOPMENT OF COOPERATIVE PLATOON BASED SCHEDULING STREGIES FOR INTERSECTION MANAGEMENT IN V2X COMMUNICATION
Authors: Bisht, Neha
Keywords: Traffic Congestion;Technologies;Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control;Vehicles Travel
Issue Date: Jun-2019
Publisher: I I T ROORKEE
Abstract: Tra c congestion is a widespread concern since the emergence of automobiles. The most a ected areas are road intersections which are vulnerable to fatal accidents and environmental damages. In the past decade, a number of strategies and technologies have been developed to mitigate this problem. The conventional strategies such as tra c lights, use of public transport, etc.. have been bene cial. However, innovative strategies are still needed. One of the emerging technologies is autonomous driving in cooperative intelligent transportation systems using vehicle to everything (V2X) communication. Vehicles travel along the road by exchanging information with their surrounding using V2X communication. IEEE 802.11p protocol supports V2X communication for achieving tra c e ciency along with road safety. Furthermore, for increasing the road capacity, vehicles travel in tightly formed groups called platoons following coordinated movements of their leaders. For better tra c ow control, the advanced driver assistance strategy Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) is adopted. CACC is a longitudinal control system for intelligent automatic cruising of platoons. This thesis work aims at implementing and analyzing the cooperative platoon based scheduling strategies for managing road intersections using V2X communication. The rst strategy considers space based tra c control (STC) that involves platoon rearrangement to utilize road capacity and maximize number of vehicles crossing intersection in green phase of signal. The density based tra c control (DTC) allows tra c of greater density to pass through the intersection. The proposed position based tra c control (PTC) prioritizes platoons based on their proximity to intersection. DTC and proposed PTC are decentralized approaches which have platoons making their own independent decisions on crossing intersection. They involve dynamic tra c lights which reserve time space and activate desirable phase for incoming platoons dynamically to reduce waiting delay at red signal. Performance metrics of IEEE 802.11p protocol such as channel load and data packet losses are used for comparing the strategies. The three strategies are implemented using a coupled network simulator with OMNET++ for vehicular communication and SUMO for simulating tra c. Simulation results show better performances of DTC and proposed PTC strategies as compared to STC strategy in terms of travel capacity, throughput and waiting delay criteria. This thesis also illustrates that although DTC has comparable results as those of proposed PTC, it lacks in reliability and safety due to high channel busy ratio and packet loss ratio
URI: http://localhost:8081/xmlui/handle/123456789/15675
metadata.dc.type: Other
Appears in Collections:MASTERS' THESES (E & C)

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
G29211.pdf1.31 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.