Paper detail

Commuting with Autonomous Vehicles: A Branch and Cut Algorithm with Redundant Modeling

This paper studies the benefits of autonomous vehicles in ride-sharing platforms dedicated to serving commuting needs. It considers the Commute Trip Sharing Problem with Autonomous Vehicles (CTSPAV), the optimization problem faced by a reservation-based platform that receives daily commute-trip requests and serves them with a fleet of autonomous vehicles. The CTSPAV can be viewed as a special case of the Dial- A-Ride Problem (DARP). However, this paper recognizes that commuting trips exhibit special spatial and temporal properties that can be exploited in a branch and cut algorithm that leverages a redundant modeling approach. In particular, the branch and cut algorithm relies on a MIP formulation that schedules mini routes representing inbound or outbound trips. This formulation is effective in finding high-quality solutions quickly but its relaxation is relatively weak. To remedy this limitation, the mini-route MIP is complemented by a DARP formulation which is not as effective in obtaining primal solutions but has a stronger relaxation. The benefits of the proposed approach are demonstrated by comparing it with another, more traditional, exact branch and cut procedure and a heuristic method based on mini routes. The methodological contribution is complemented by a comprehensive analysis of a CTSPAV platform for reducing vehicle counts, travel distances, and congestion. In particular, the case study for a medium-sized city reveals that a CTSPAV platform can reduce daily vehicle counts by a staggering 92% and decrease vehicles miles by 30%. The platform also significantly reduces congestion, measured as the number of vehicles on the road per unit time, by 60% during peak times. These benefits, however, come at the expense of introducing empty miles. Hence the paper also highlights the tradeoffs between future ride-sharing and car-pooling platforms.

preprint2021arXivOpen access
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