Using observed traffic volumes to improve fine-grained regional emissions estimation.

Author(s)
Niemeier, D.A. Lin, K. & Utts, J.
Year
Abstract

When translating travel demand model output to photochemical model input, period-based network assignment volumes must be converted to gridded-hourly vehicle emissions. A post-processor, such as the California Direct Travel Impact Model (DTIM2), is frequently used to disaggregate the period-based travel demand assignments to the fine grained spatial and temporal resolution required by the photochemical models. A recent theoretical enhancement proposed refining the temporal and spatial resolutions of travel demand model predictions using observed count data. This method provides a technique for disaggregating the period-based travel demand model assignments (eg AM peak, PM peak) into the hourly summaries required by most photochemical models (Lin and Niemeier, 1997). In this study the authors present a methodological framework for applying the new theory and discuss the results of a large-scale application empirical comparison between the standard and proposed methods for estimating regional mobile emissions in Sacramento, California. The standard method produced slightly higher estimates of daily emissions (about 1%) when compared to the emissions estimated using observed count data. However, the two approaches produced hourly emissions estimates that differed by as much as 15% in some hours. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E102156 /15 / ITRD E102156
Source

Transportation Research Part D. 1999 /09. 4d(5) Pp313-32 (13 Refs.)

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.