Biobjective optimization for railway alignment fine‐grained designs with parallel existing railways

Author:

Gao Yan12,Zhang Tianlong12,Zhu Caiyiyi12,Yang Shusheng3,Schonfeld Paul4,Zou Kai5,Zhang Jialing12,Zhu Ying6,Wang Ping12,He Qing12

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of High‐Speed Railway Engineering Ministry of Education Southwest Jiaotong University Chengdu China

2. School of Civil Engineering Southwest Jiaotong University Chengdu China

3. Jiqing High Speed Railway Co., Ltd. Jinan China

4. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

5. China Railway Design Group Co., Ltd. Tianjin China

6. China Railway Co., Ltd. Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractUrban high‐speed railway construction is complex due to limited land resources, high population density, and potential construction risks, especially when new tracks are parallelly aligned to operational railways. Addressing a gap in current literature on fine optimization of manual alignment in such scenarios, this paper introduces a biobjective approximate fine‐grained optimization model for railway alignments (BA‐FORA). Utilizing an approximate dynamic programming (ADP) method, BA‐FORA effectively searches the feasible region to approach a global optimum, overcoming the dimensionality challenges inherent in standard dynamic programming (DP). This paper presents a biobjective optimization framework that takes into account both construction cost and construction risk adjacent to existing operating railways (CRAEOR), offering a method for the fine‐grained design of new railways adjacent to existing railways. Finally, the proposed BA‐FORA framework is applied to practical cases, demonstrating its superior optimization performance. The findings indicate that the BA‐FORA model can autonomously investigate and enhance railway alignment. It generates cost‐effective and low‐risk solutions exceeding manual efforts, ensuring alignment constraint compliance.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

Wiley

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