The departure sight triangle provides the view for the vehicle waiting to cross at the two-way stop-controlled intersection. The factors influencing the sight triangle for human drivers are considered in the 2018 AASHTO Green Book, but the Green Book lacks quantitative estimations for automated vehicles (AVs). Therefore, to guarantee the AV's operational safety, this study investigated the impact of intersection angle, speed, and crossing distance on the AV's intersection crossing maneuver. Using physics theorems and cosine law, formulae for the detecting angle (DA) and distance (DD), the two main components of the departure sight triangle, were developed for the acute- and obtuse-angle sides of the intersection for an AV approaching on the minor road; the minimum required DA and DD, with a given crossing distance, are thus proposed for the AV's operational design domain (ODD). Calculations indicate that the DD is mainly affected by the major road design speed and crossing distance, and that the DD increases very quickly as the speed and crossing distance increase. The intersection angle was found to have great impact on the DA on both the acute and obtuse sides, but its influence is negative on the acute side and positive on the obtuse side. On the acute side, the ODD detecting angle range is set as [83.4, 132.7], [80.7, 131.6], and [78.4, 130.7] degrees for major roads with 2, 4, and 6 lanes, respectively. On the obtuse side, the ODD is set as [57.4, 160.6], [70.6, 207.9], and [82.2, 249.1] m for the same respective roads. After comparing the DA and DD results, and depending on the intersection design attributes, it is concluded that most engineering attention should be paid to the DA on the acute side and DD on the obtuse side.

Operational design domain of automated vehicles for crossing maneuvers at two-way stop-controlled intersections

Cafiso S.;
2022-01-01

Abstract

The departure sight triangle provides the view for the vehicle waiting to cross at the two-way stop-controlled intersection. The factors influencing the sight triangle for human drivers are considered in the 2018 AASHTO Green Book, but the Green Book lacks quantitative estimations for automated vehicles (AVs). Therefore, to guarantee the AV's operational safety, this study investigated the impact of intersection angle, speed, and crossing distance on the AV's intersection crossing maneuver. Using physics theorems and cosine law, formulae for the detecting angle (DA) and distance (DD), the two main components of the departure sight triangle, were developed for the acute- and obtuse-angle sides of the intersection for an AV approaching on the minor road; the minimum required DA and DD, with a given crossing distance, are thus proposed for the AV's operational design domain (ODD). Calculations indicate that the DD is mainly affected by the major road design speed and crossing distance, and that the DD increases very quickly as the speed and crossing distance increase. The intersection angle was found to have great impact on the DA on both the acute and obtuse sides, but its influence is negative on the acute side and positive on the obtuse side. On the acute side, the ODD detecting angle range is set as [83.4, 132.7], [80.7, 131.6], and [78.4, 130.7] degrees for major roads with 2, 4, and 6 lanes, respectively. On the obtuse side, the ODD is set as [57.4, 160.6], [70.6, 207.9], and [82.2, 249.1] m for the same respective roads. After comparing the DA and DD results, and depending on the intersection design attributes, it is concluded that most engineering attention should be paid to the DA on the acute side and DD on the obtuse side.
2022
Automated vehicles
CARLA simulation
Operational design domain
Sight distance
Stop-controlled intersection
Accidents, Traffic
Data Collection
Engineering
Humans
Safety
Automobile Driving
Autonomous Vehicles
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11769/525072
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