Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN):
Speed is a key performance measure in economic and environrnental
analyses of two-lane highways. Speed, combined with the percentage of
time spent following, is also used in the assessment of levei of service.
Under free-ftow conditions, the circulation of a given vehicle is not constrained by the presence of other vehicles, and the driver's speed choice
reftects the driver's response to the geometric features of the road and
roadside interference, as well as the driver's perception of risk. Many
studies concerned with the effects of road characteristics, design features in particular, on vehicle speed have been conducted in several
countries in recent decades. These studies have provided useful tools
for modeling speed and evaluating alignment consistency. This paper
presents an exponential free-flow speed model, applicable to both curves
and tangents, developed for two-lane highways in Portugal. The variables included in the model are representative not only of the road element under consideration (curve or tangent) but also of the preceding
road section and of the visual field downstream from the elemento The
results from this model are compared with other authors' results and
with the guidelines in the Highway Capacity Manua120LO. In addition to
the primary inftuence of the horizontal curvature on speed, the results
show that other factors, such as the cross-sectional width, the density of
access points, and the downstream visibility, are important.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
No. of pages:
7