3.2.2. Analysis of Experimental Results
The experiment adopted a comparative analysis of control variables and conducted statistical analysis on the running time of vehicles under various traffic scenarios and input conditions.
The traffic organization methodologies are as follows: (1) Equal right-of-way (ER)—CVs and EVs could drive in any lane and change lanes freely without intervention; (2) Priority for special road right-of-way (PSR)—the outer lane is a dedicated lane for EVs, so CVs are not allowed to enter that lane; (3) Dynamic right-of-way (PDR)—the outer lanes are virtual dedicated lanes for EVs so that CVs can enter intermittently. The experimental simulation inputs and output data are presented in
Table 4,
Table 5,
Table 6 and
Table 7.
Figure 10 depicts the experimental results under various CV flow conditions. Since the three test methods travel the same length of road, the shorter running time indicates that the vehicle is moving faster and more efficiently, where the length of the non-intrusion interval is
, and the length of the buffer zone is
. In all the presented curves, except for the PSR curve in
Figure 10a, which remained unchanged, the other curves revealed an upward trend, but the degree was different. Under PSR conditions, since EVs and CVs drive in separate lanes, the operation of the EVs was not affected by the CVs, so the corresponding curve illustrates a flat trend. Obviously, the EV operation effect was remarkable under the PDR condition (
Figure 10a), and it was almost close to the PSR operation effect when the flow rate was less than 1700 pcu/h. In
Figure 10b, at flow rates less than 1800 pcu/h, the PDR had less impact on the CVs than the PSR, therein increasing the delay by less than 8% compared to ER. Both the PDR and ER methods were implemented without setting a dedicated lane, while the PSR method required a dedicated lane to be implemented. Combined with the analysis shown in
Figure 10a,b, the proposed PDR method could significantly reduce the delay of the EV’s operation. Given that the CVs’ delays were almost unaffected (less than 8%), the maximum delay could be reduced by more than 80% (when the flow rate was 1600 pcu/h), and the conclusion was based on the relative performance of the PDR and ER methods.
Figure 10a,b show that the PDR control effect under a high flow rate was more sensitive: the change with the flow rate was large, and the delay was too large.
Figure 10a infers that, when the flow rate exceeded 1950 pcu/h, the EV’s delay was greater than that of the ER method, thus indicating that the advantages of the PDR could no longer be reflected.
Figure 10b highlights that, when the flow rate exceeded 1900 pcu/h, the CVs’ delay under the PDR method increased sharply, again revealing that the PDR method was unsuitable for high flow conditions. In other words, the PDR approach cannot achieve satisfactory operating results on road sections with a saturation greater than 0.8. The above phenomenon was mainly due to the frequent lane change of the CVs owing to the PDR control method. Given that the CVs must avoid the EVs and change lanes in time, this lane change may destroy the original stable group of following vehicles in the inner lane, thus causing some vehicles to decelerate and even generate deceleration waves. As a result, the phenomenon illustrated in
Figure 10a,b occurs in high-traffic situations.
Figure 11 depicts the change curve vs. running time due to various buffer zone lengths in front of the EVs, which reflect the operating efficiency by the change in running time. The shorter the running time, the higher the efficiency when the length of the running section is the same. In addition, the mutual influence is reflected by comparing the trend of EV and CV running times under the same control method. It is worth mentioning that
is not discussed in this study, because it is closely related to the vehicle’s driving state ahead, and the variation law is complex. To simplify the test process and obtain a relatively objective trend of the influence of the buffer interval length on the running time,
was fixed at 15 m during the simulation, and the flow rate was fixed at 1300 pcu/h. In addition,
varied from 30 m to 150 m to derive the variation rule [
20].
Figure 11a,b reveal that the ER and PSR had a flat trend. Under PDR conditions, the EV’s running time curve presented a downward trend, and the CV’s running time showed an upward trend. The two aligned with the mutual influence mechanism on operating efficiency. Since EVs do not have physical functional areas under the ER and PSR conditions, which are unaffected by the inter-buffer length, the corresponding curves did not change with the inter-buffer length. In
Figure 11a, when the length between the buffer zones exceeded 120 m, the PDR curve gradually tended to be flat and approached the PSR curve. When CVs cannot be imported, the operation effect is similar to PSR. The change in the PDR curve in
Figure 11b was exactly opposite to that in
Figure 11a, which reveals the result of CVs and EVs preempting limited road space resources. Therefore, when the CV’s flow rate is high, the buffer length should be reduced, and the efficiency of the CV’s operation can be enhanced.
Since the ER and PDR methods compress the running space of CVs to different degrees, the saturation will increase.
Figure 12a shows the relationship between the running time and the saturation of different organization methods, where the length of the non-invasive interval was
, and the length of the buffer zone was
. The flow input changed from 600 pcu/h to 2000 pcu/h. The saturation degree is the flow-to-traffic capacity ratio, with capacity set at 1200 pcu/h per lane. According to the traffic flow theory, the higher the saturation and speed, the greater the corresponding traffic capacity. Visibly, when the saturation is less than 0.8, the traffic capacity of the PSR method is the largest, followed by the PDR method, and the ER method is the smallest, but the traffic capacity corresponding to the PSR method is close to the PDR method. Although the PSR method has excellent advantages concerning traffic capacity, it requires many space resources. The plotted results in
Figure 10b reveal that the space resources of the EVs compressed the CVs, declined the CVs’ operation efficiencies, and the PSR method had the most substantial impact on the other vehicles. Therefore, from the system point of view, the PSR method is not a method with better comprehensive performance. Since there is no lane change in the PSR method, the PDR method is a semi-free lane change (CV entry into the buffer requires a forced lane change), and the ER method is a completely free lane change, which also displays that the lane change has an adverse effect on the system, thus reducing the operating efficiency of the system. The results in
Figure 12b indicate the effect of the speed difference between EVs and CVs compared to the actual EV operating speed, where the length of the two physical functional areas is depicted in
Figure 12a, and the flow input was constant at 1300 pcu/h. The difference between the desired and actual EV speed under the ER method was the largest, thus indicating that EVs have the greatest resistance to travel under the ER condition and the greatest degree of impact on the EV’s operating efficiency. Then, without dedicated lanes (PDR method compared to ER method), the PDR method could significantly reduce EV driving resistance, and the operating effect was almost the same as the PSR when the speed difference was not large. It is not difficult to understand that the EV’s speed was reduced. Combining the above two sets of experiments, it is evident that, under the PDR method, when the EV’s speed is low, the length of the corresponding buffer zone should be reduced, and the corresponding saturation is high. When the EV’s speed is high, the corresponding buffer length should be increased, the saturation is low, and the buffer length and speed present a proportional trend.
By combining the advantages and disadvantages of the three methods mentioned above, it becomes clear that the PSR and ER methods are very extreme. The PSR method reflects a significant advantage for EVs by gaining absolute right-of-way, but this methodology has the greatest impact on other vehicles. In contrast, the ER method guarantees an equal right-of-way for all vehicles and fairness. However, EVs operate the least efficiently under this organization method. The proposed PDR method considers the operational efficiency of both EVs and CVs, and the PDR method has the best overall performance.
The above experiments reveal the interaction mechanism between EVs and CVs from different perspectives. However, the space resources on the road are limited. If the priority of EVs increases, the operating efficiency of the CVs must be reduced, thus showing a trend of trade-offs. In practice, the operating efficiency of EVs should be much higher than that of CVs. Noticeably, the operating efficiency of CVs is directly related to the operating efficiency of EVs.
Figure 10a,b demonstrate the mechanism impacting the CVs’ lane change on the operational efficiency of roadway traffic. Therefore, in high-urgency emergency rescue missions, the impact of CVs on EVs can be reduced by adjusting CV lane change rates so that EVs can achieve a higher operational efficiency. In low-urgency emergency missions, the impact on CVs can be minimized while maintaining the efficiency of the EV’s’ operation.
Figure 13 illustrates the net gain of the system operation for the PDR method with different weights of CVs. The value of
w reduces the frequency of lane change from the inner CVs to the outer lane to varying degrees.
w = 0 represents the curve without attenuated CV influence, while
w = 1 denotes the curve under prohibited CV lane changes to the outer lane. In
Figure 13a, the length of the non-intrusive interval was
, the length of the buffer zone was
, and the flow input was changed from 600 pcu/h to 2000 pcu/h. The plotted results indicate that the operating efficiency of EVs was the highest for
, and the curves achieved the maximum value near the CV flow rate of 1700 pcu/h. In
Figure 13b, the length of the non-intrusive interval was
, the flow input remained unchanged at 1300 pcu/h, and the buffer length changed from 30 m to 150 m. For
, the operating efficiency of EVs changed the least, specifically when the buffer interval exceeded 120 m. The change did not exceed 5% of the overall change, and these results can be employed to guide actual emergency rescue missions.