Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factors

Passenger car equivalency (PCE) of heavy trucks is often studied using filed observation and microscopic simulation models, especially for signalized intersections. While the Highway Capacity Manual recommends a single value regardless of the percentage of those heavy vehicles, literatures have show...

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Main Authors: Mohammad Shareef Ghanim, Ghassan Abu-Lebdeh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2022-09-01
Series:International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2046043021000575
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author Mohammad Shareef Ghanim
Ghassan Abu-Lebdeh
author_facet Mohammad Shareef Ghanim
Ghassan Abu-Lebdeh
author_sort Mohammad Shareef Ghanim
collection DOAJ
description Passenger car equivalency (PCE) of heavy trucks is often studied using filed observation and microscopic simulation models, especially for signalized intersections. While the Highway Capacity Manual recommends a single value regardless of the percentage of those heavy vehicles, literatures have shown that this equivalency is affected by different factors, including the trucks percentage. This research aims to examine the PCE under different level of traffic and heavy trucks demands. First, field measurements were collected and used to examine the characteristics of heavy vehicle and passenger car headways in oversaturated interrupted flow conditions. Field observations were then used to calibrate a microscopic simulation model. The model was then used to evaluate impact on headways of different levels of congestion and heavy vehicle percentages. Field results show that truck headways are about 2.3 those of passenger cars. The results also show that trucks are 1.5 more likely to be first in a queue when compared to passenger cars and 1.7 times more likely to be in first four vehicles in a standing queue. Passenger cars immediately behind trucks had longer than average headway. The simulation results suggest that PCE increases nonlinearly with increase in congestion level and with percentage of trucks; PCE's increase becomes less marked once sever congestion (stop-and-go with increasing queue lengths) conditions set in.
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spelling doaj.art-cec6d6186789449cbdff1713de513a1f2023-08-02T08:32:00ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology2046-04302022-09-01113589602Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factorsMohammad Shareef Ghanim0Ghassan Abu-Lebdeh1Ministry of Transport and Communications, Doha, Qatar; Corresponding author.American University of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab EmiratesPassenger car equivalency (PCE) of heavy trucks is often studied using filed observation and microscopic simulation models, especially for signalized intersections. While the Highway Capacity Manual recommends a single value regardless of the percentage of those heavy vehicles, literatures have shown that this equivalency is affected by different factors, including the trucks percentage. This research aims to examine the PCE under different level of traffic and heavy trucks demands. First, field measurements were collected and used to examine the characteristics of heavy vehicle and passenger car headways in oversaturated interrupted flow conditions. Field observations were then used to calibrate a microscopic simulation model. The model was then used to evaluate impact on headways of different levels of congestion and heavy vehicle percentages. Field results show that truck headways are about 2.3 those of passenger cars. The results also show that trucks are 1.5 more likely to be first in a queue when compared to passenger cars and 1.7 times more likely to be in first four vehicles in a standing queue. Passenger cars immediately behind trucks had longer than average headway. The simulation results suggest that PCE increases nonlinearly with increase in congestion level and with percentage of trucks; PCE's increase becomes less marked once sever congestion (stop-and-go with increasing queue lengths) conditions set in.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2046043021000575Passenger car equivalencyHeavy vehiclesCongested trafficSignalized intersectionsMicrosimulation
spellingShingle Mohammad Shareef Ghanim
Ghassan Abu-Lebdeh
Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factors
International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology
Passenger car equivalency
Heavy vehicles
Congested traffic
Signalized intersections
Microsimulation
title Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factors
title_full Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factors
title_fullStr Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factors
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factors
title_short Characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions: Towards development of passenger car equivalency factors
title_sort characterization of heavy vehicle headways in oversaturated interrupted conditions towards development of passenger car equivalency factors
topic Passenger car equivalency
Heavy vehicles
Congested traffic
Signalized intersections
Microsimulation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2046043021000575
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AT ghassanabulebdeh characterizationofheavyvehicleheadwaysinoversaturatedinterruptedconditionstowardsdevelopmentofpassengercarequivalencyfactors