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  Sustainable smart city mobility enabled by Micro and Macro control flow optimisation of cooperative autonomous vehicles PhD


   School of Aerospace, Transport and Manufacturing (SATM)

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  Dr Argyrios Zolotas  No more applications being accepted  Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

Smart cities have attracted significant attention in the context of urban development policies for a sustainable cities future. Infrastructure and use of new technologies are vital to make a city truly “smart”. Mobility is recognised as a crucial element to support the functioning of the urban area for improved quality of services and life.

Current transportation networks become overloaded resulting to both increased levels of congestion and of pollution. This is a funded joint PhD project between Cranfield University, UK (CU) and Université de Technologie de Compiègne, France (UTC) which will investigate the link between Multi-Vehicle Systems (MVS) and interactive smart mobility infrastructure layer. Smart mobility infrastructure facilities in UTC and CU support a realistic problem investigation.

This research will lead to a proposed solution for control architecture combining a global component (vehicle-vehicle interaction and interaction with supervisory infrastructure) to enable improved mobility in cities. The work will investigate the link between Multi-Vehicle Systems (MVS) and interactive smart mobility infrastructure layer. The work falls within the remit of efficient and smart mobility within future smart cities. Current smart mobility infrastructure facilities in UTC and CU support a realistic problem investigation (i.e. provision of data for the synthetic framework).

This PhD project is collaborative research between Heudiasyc (UMR UTC/CNRS, France) and Cranfield University (United Kingdom). The successful candidate will spend time both in France (between the SyRI team of Heydiasyc Laboratory), and in the UK (in the Autonomous and Cyber-Physical Systems Centre), 18 months each. The research team comprises complementary research excellence in control of complex systems (single and multi-robot/vehicle), Artificial Intelligence, Multi-Agent Systems, from UTC; and Systems Autonomy, Autonomous vehicle mobility, Intelligent systems, Real-time Decision making, from CU.

This thesis topic deals with the energy optimization of road traffic in cities using an optimal coordination of Multi-Vehicle Systems (MVS) within the existing infrastructure in the city. More specifically, this thesis aims at the coordination of MVS in city bottlenecks, essentially the intersections and roundabouts (e.g. considered as dynamic traversability obstacles for the vehicles). In these strategic nodes for traffic management of cities, vehicles are often required to brake / accelerate, or even come to a complete stop and then restart. All of these situations are extremely energy consuming for vehicles and correspond to one of the major causes of traffic jams (which is turn a major cause of energy consumption for these transport systems within city mobility). It is worth mentioning that these sudden changes in speed are also a major source of passenger discomfort.

The PhD candidate will investigate an overall control architecture combining a global level layer to reduce congestion in cities (which will be modeled in the form of a stochastic system), and a lower-level layer (corresponding to vehicle-vehicle (VV) or vehicles-infrastructure (VI) interactions directly in the strategic nodes of cities). The interactions between a macro-model (which will be modeled by a macro-model seeing the city as distinct arteries to be traversed) and a micro-model consisting of the interactions between VV and VI to cross intersections or roundabouts will be studied in a systematic way, in order to lead to more sustainable and safer traffic management/control.

How to apply

To apply, please follow this link and click “Apply now”.

For general enquiries about this position, including help applying, terms and conditions, etc, please contact: [Email Address Removed], quoting reference number SATM237.

Engineering (12)

Funding Notes

To be eligible for this funding in full, applicants must be a UK/EU national.

Sponsored by Cranfield and UTC cotutelle studentship; this is a fully funded opportunity. The successful candidate will spend half the time in France and half the time in the UK.
Sponsored by EPSRC, Cranfield University and SAAB UK, this studentship will provide a bursary of up to £18,000 (tax free) plus fees* for three years.
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