Silvia Siri

2papers

2 Papers

6.0SYMay 25
Justice-informed Planning of Intermodal Autonomous Mobility-on-Demand Systems under Operational Constraints

Giacomo Ganassoli, Francesco Mazzeo, Cecilia Pasquale et al.

To date, most of the research on transport planning has focused on optimizing revenues or utilitarian metrics such as average travel times, which often ends up penalizing the worst-off for the sake of profit or efficiency. At the same time, most of the research in transport justice has focused on assessing injustices, without being able to prescribe operational solutions. This paper contributes to bridging this gap and presents optimization models for justice-informed operational planning of intermodal mobility systems that explicitly account for the budget and safety limitations of users, and for infrastructural capacity constraints. Specifically, we first focus on an intermodal Autonomous Mobility-on-Demand (AMoD) system -- where self-driving robotaxis provide on-demand mobility jointly with public transit and active modes -- and characterize its operations from a mesoscopic planning perspective via network flow models. Second, we leverage these models to optimize system operations through both utilitarian efficiency and justice-informed objectives. We showcase our framework in a real-world case-study for Manhattan, New York. Our results show that monetary budgets significantly limit the social justice potential of AMoD systems if they are to be deployed as transportation network companies. At the same time, granting free public transit can result in sufficiency levels very close to a completely free intermodal AMoD system, where justice-informed operations can be achieved without compromising standard efficiency metrics, ultimately highlighting the strong potential of social policies.

59.7SYMay 25
Optimal Dispatch of Connected and Autonomous Electric Vehicles to Enhance Short-Term Grid Flexibility in Smart Cities

Nikolas Sacchi, Giacomo Basile, Silvia Siri et al.

This paper proposes a coordinated energy-mobility dispatch framework for grid support service provision in smart cities under time constraints. In particular, a scenario in which a distributed system operator requests a specified amount of energy within a given deadline is considered. A fleet of connected autonomous electric vehicles equipped with virtual battery partitioning is dynamically dispatched toward vehicle-to-grid stations. The routing problem is formulated as a periodically updated resource-constrained shortest path, accounting for time and energy constraints with congestion-dependent travel times derived from a dynamic traffic model. At the vehicle level, a model predictive control strategy regulates speed to satisfy mobility energy requirements while ensuring deadline compliance. The framework is validated through simulations on the urban network of Rapallo (Italy), demonstrating robustness against congestion-induced delays.