Lec 17, Ch.9, pp.359-375: Capacity of freeway sections (objectives) Understand capacity and level of service are the heart of transportation analyses Understand.

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Presentation transcript:

Lec 17, Ch.9, pp : Capacity of freeway sections (objectives) Understand capacity and level of service are the heart of transportation analyses Understand capacity analysis was set up for ideal cases and modifications are made to reflect prevailing conditions Understand many factors (geometric, traffic, and control characteristics) affect the capacity and level of service of a facility Learn what types of analysis can be done for basic freeway segments

What we cover in class today… Definition of capacity and level of service Definition of basic freeway segments Factors affecting capacity and LOS of basic freeway segments Relationship between speed, flow rate, density, and level of service Operational analysis and planning analysis for basic freeway segments

Issues of traffic capacity analysis Two issues of traffic capacity analyses  How much traffic a given facility can accommodate (capacity analysis)?  Under what operating conditions can it accommodate that much traffic (level of service)? Highway Capacity Manual (HCM)  1950 HCM by the Bureau of Public Roads  1965 HCM by the TRB  1985 HCM by the TRB (Highway Capacity Software developed)  1994 updates to 1985 HCM  1997 updates to 1994 HCM  2000 HCM 2000 was published

Capacity concept Capacity as defined by HCM: “the maximum hourly rate at which persons or vehicles can be reasonably expected to traverse a point or uniform segment of a lane or roadway during a given time period under prevailing conditions.”  Traffic  Roadway  Control With different prevailing conditions, different methods to estimate capacity HCM analyses are usually for the peak (worst) 15-min period. Some regularity expected (but capacity is not a fixed value) Sometimes using persons makes more sense, like transit

Level of service “A level of service is a letter designation that describes a range of operating conditions on a particular type of facility.” LOS A (best)LOS F (worst or system breakdown) LOS is defined by a single measure of effectiveness (MOE). Speed/Travel TimeDelayDensity Urban Arterials Freeway and rural arterials Intersections

Basic freeway segments Basic freeway segments: Segments of the freeway that are outside of the influence area of ramps or weaving areas and have uniform traffic and roadway conditions. I-15 under construction

Level of service example LOS C or D LOS B LOS A LOS E or F Level of service Density range (pc/mi/ln) A B C18.1 – 26.0 D26.1 – 35.0 E35.1 – 45.0 F> 45.0

Performance measures for basic freeway segments Performance measures can be: Density, speed, and volume-to-capacity Interpolate if necessary.

Performance measures (cont) Density criteria are independent of FFS level

Base conditions and ideal condition for freeway flow & affecting factors Base conditions for freeway capacity: Good weather, good visibility, no incidents Ideal conditions for freeway flow (& factors affecting its level of service): Min. lane widths of 12 feet Min. right-shoulder lateral clearance of 6 feet (median  2 ft) Traffic stream consisting of passenger cars only Ten or more lanes (in urban areas only) Interchanges spaced every 2 miles or more Level terrain, with grades no greater than 2%, length affects Driver population dominated by regular and familiar users

What’s needed for a basic freeway segment analysis are these two values Determination of free-flow speed (FFS), mph: Determination of 15-min. passenger-car equivalent flow rate (v p ) pcphpl: For freeways, BFFS i (i.e., deal FFS) is 70 (for urban) or 75 mph (for rural). If field study results exist, use FFS from those studies. Field FFS is estimated by travel time studies. FFS is approximately average speeds taken when flow rate is not more than 1300 pcphpl. f N adjustment is for urban freeways only. For rural freeways, f N = 0. f ID is done using a plus/minus 3-mile stretch (i.e. 6 miles). Must have one or more on-ramps. (# of on-ramps/6) (9.22) (9.21)

Once you have FFS and v p … You can determine density which is the primary measure of effectiveness of basic freeway segments. For the LOS range from A to D, S (speed) is basically FFS. Toward the upper end of LOS D to E, S does decrease from FFS as shown in the speed-flow rate diagram(Fig. 9.9).

Heavy-vehicle adjustment factor P P = percent passenger cars P T = percent trucks & buses P R = percent recreational vehicles (RVs) E T = PCE for trucks and buses E R = PCE for RVs Grade and slope length affects the values of E T and E R.

How we deal with long, sustaining grades… Extended segments Type of Terrain LevelRollingMountains E T (trucks & buses) E R (RVs) There are 3 ways to deal with long, sustaining grades: extended general freeway segments, specific upgrades, and specific downgrades. (1) Extended segments: where no one grade of 3% or greater is longer than ¼ mi or where no one grade of less than 3% is longer than ½ mi. And for planning analysis. (See p.367 for the descriptions of Level, Rolling and Mountains terrain types.)

How we deal with long, sustaining grades…(cont) (2) Specific upgrades: Any freeway grade of more than ½ mi for grades less than 3% or ¼ mi for grades of 3% or more. (For a composite grade, see the next slide.) Use the tables for E T and E R for specific grades. (3) Specific downgrades:  If the downgrade is not severe enough to cause trucks to shift into low gear, treat it as a level terrain segment.  Otherwise, use the table for downgrade E T  For RVs, downgrades may be treated as level terrain.

What if you have a composite grade in your analysis segment? G = 3% G = 2% 2,000 ft1,500 ft 3,500 ft Using the average grade method: Total rise = (0.03x2000) + (0.02x1500) = 90 ft Average grade = 90/( ) = or 2.6% Total length = 3500/5280 = 0.66 mi Note: you do not need to know the precise procedure in this class, which is discussed in detail in CE561. After all, the “precise” method assumes the entry speed of 55 mph—a remnant of the federal 55-mph speed limit law.

Four types of analysis TypeInputOutput OperationalIv p, FFSLOS IIv p, LOS, FFSS (Speed) IIIFFS, LOSV p (service volume = V p * PHF) PlanningIVv p, LOSN (No. of lanes) For planning analysis, you need to estimate the directional design hourly volume (DDHV): DDHV = AADT x K x D besides all other potential prevailing conditions. Then, V = DDHV/(no. of lanes)

Service flow rates vs. service volumes What is used for analysis is service flow rate. The actual number of vehicles that can be served during one peak hour is service volume. This reflects the peaking characteristic of traffic flow. SV i = SF i x PHF Stable flow Unstable flow Density Flow SF A SF E A B C D E F

Problem 9-12: This is a case of planning analysis – given v p and LOS, find number of lanes needed Step 1: Compute heavy vehicle adjustment factor Step 2: Assume number of lanes (freeway >= 4 lanes – 2 lane each way minimum) and compute 15-min peak passenger-car equivalent flow rate. Hint 1: Design volume of a freeway is given for each direction. Hint 2: Highest freeway lane capacity is about 2300 pcphpl. Step 3: Compute free flow speed given BFFS (70 mph in this case) and number of lanes used in Step 2 and other data. Step 4: Compute density using v p and FFS and determine LOS to see if computed LOS meets the desired LOS. (Tab 9-33) Repeat steps 2 to 4 till design LOS is met.