Stationary Condition Based Performance Analysis of the Contraflow Left-Turn Lane Design Considering the Influence of the Upstream Intersection
Journal article, 2021

The present study conducted an operational performance analysis of the contraflow left-turn lane (CLL) design considering the influence of the upstream signalized intersection. The arrival distribution was generated using a platoon dispersion model. A stationary condition was defined, in which the performance of the CLL design remained stable in any stationary cycle. It has proved that the CLL system always converges to the stationary condition after a few cycles if the arrival distribution is fixed. In stationary cycles, the CLL design generates either recurrent and constant residual queues or no queues, depending on the arrival distributions of left-turning vehicles. Based on the stationary condition, analytical models were developed to estimate the operational performance for left-turns at signalized intersections with the CLL design. The results show that both the arrival pattern and the length of the contraflow lane can significantly influence the operational performance of the CLL design. The residual queues in the stationary condition could increase control delay significantly, leading to an overlong delay of the left-turning vehicles if the contraflow lane was not carefully designed. To this end, an empirical optimization method was proposed to minimize the control delay by optimizing the length of contraflow lanes and the offset between adjacent intersections. The research results can be directly employed by traffic engineers to optimize the CLL design and to estimate the operational performance of the signalized intersections with the CLL design.

Signalized Intersection

Residual queues

CLL design

Stationary condition

Platoon dispersion

Author

Jiaming Wu

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Systems and control

Pan Liu

Southeast University

Yang Zhou

University of Wisconsin Madison

Hao Yu

Southeast University

Transportation Research, Part C: Emerging Technologies

0968-090X (ISSN)

Vol. 122 102919

Subject Categories

Computational Mathematics

Transport Systems and Logistics

Business Administration

DOI

10.1016/j.trc.2020.102919

More information

Latest update

4/5/2022 6