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Impact of horizontal geometric design of two-lane rural roads on vehicle co2 emissions
Institution:1. Key Laboratory of Road and Traffic Engineering, Ministry of Education, Shanghai 201804, China;2. School of Highway, Chang’an University, Xi’an 710064, Shaanxi, China;3. School of Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering, Loughborough University, Loughborough LE11 3TU, United Kingdom;4. School of Transportation Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 201804, China;5. National Engineering Laboratory for Integrated Optimization of Road Traffic and Safety Analysis Technologies, China;1. Civil and Environmental Engineering, California Polytechnic State University, United States;2. Wyoming Technology Transfer Center, Department of Civil & Architectural Engineering, University of Wyoming, United States;3. South Carolina Department of Transportation, Columbia, SC, United States;1. Key Laboratory of High-Speed Railway Engineering, Ministry of Education, School of Civil Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610031, China;2. Sichuan Highway Planning, Survey, Design and Research Institute Ltd, Chengdu 610031, China
Abstract:In 2014, highway vehicles accounted for 72.8% of all Greenhouse Gases emissions from transportation in Europe. In the United States (US), emissions follow a similar trend. Although many initiatives try to mitigate emissions by focusing on traffic operations, little is known about the relationship between emissions and road design. It is feasible that some designs may increase average flow speed and reduce accelerations, consequently minimizing emissions.This study aims to evaluate the impact of road horizontal alignment on CO2 emissions produced by passenger cars using a new methodology based on naturalistic data collection. Individual continuous speed profiles were collected from actual drivers along eleven two-lane rural road sections that were divided into 29 homogeneous road segments. The CO2 emission rate for each homogeneous road segment was estimated as the average of CO2 emission rates of all vehicles driving, estimated by applying the VT-Micro model.The analysis concluded that CO2 emission rates increase with the Curvature Change Rate. Smooth road segments normally allowed drivers to reach higher speeds and maintain them with fewer accelerations. Additionally, smother segments required less time to cover the same distance, so emissions per length were lower. It was also observed that low mean speeds produce high CO2 emission rates and they increase even more on roads with high speed dispersions.Based on this data, several regression models were calibrated for different vehicle types to estimate CO2 emissions on a specific road segment. These results could be used to incorporate sustainability principles to highway geometric design.
Keywords:Highway geometric design  Two-lane rural road  Traffic operation  Environmentally-friendly transport  Naturalistic data
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