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Title:

System-wide Impacts of Eco-routing Strategies on Large-Scale Networks

Accession Number:

01368304

Record Type:

Component

Abstract:

This paper investigates the system-wide impacts of using eco-routing within two large metropolitan networks (i.e., Cleveland downtown and Columbus downtown). The INTEGRATION software is utilized to evaluate various eco-routing strategies. The simulation results demonstrate that the eco-routed vehicles do not always save fuel consumption when compared to the standard user equilibrium. In particular, the fuel savings of eco-routing are sensitive to the network configuration, the congestion levels, and the market penetration of eco-routing vehicles. Furthermore, eco-routing does not necessarily reduce vehicle travel distance or travel time. The simulation results indicate that when the eco-routing reduces fuel consumption levels it also tends to reduce both travel distance and travel time when compared to the standard user-equilibrium routing. The simulation results show that in general when the market penetration of eco-routing vehicles is 90 and 100 percent the total system-wide fuel consumption is minimized in most cases. Furthermore, for this specific case study the user-equilibrium routing scenario does not produce the highest fuel consumption level. Instead, a market penetration of 20 percent eco-routers appears to produce the highest fuel consumption levels.

Supplemental Notes:

This paper was sponsored by TRB committee ADC20 Transportation and Air Quality

Monograph Accession #:

01362476

Report/Paper Numbers:

12-1638

Language:

English

Corporate Authors:

Transportation Research Board

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

Authors:

Ahn, Kyoungho
Rakha, Hesham A
Moran, Kevin

Pagination:

17p

Publication Date:

2012

Conference:

Transportation Research Board 91st Annual Meeting

Location: Washington DC, United States
Date: 2012-1-22 to 2012-1-26
Sponsors: Transportation Research Board

Media Type:

Digital/other

Features:

Figures; References

Uncontrolled Terms:

Geographic Terms:

Subject Areas:

Energy; Environment; Highways; Operations and Traffic Management; I15: Environment; I72: Traffic and Transport Planning

Source Data:

Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2012 Paper #12-1638

Files:

TRIS, TRB

Created Date:

Feb 8 2012 5:03PM