Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5127047 Transportation Research Part B: Methodological 2017 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Pedestrian flow through a narrow door is studied via controlled experiments•Behavioural aspects can be subsumed into the density at the door, up to some point.•The flow rate increases monotonically with the density, for limited crowd pressure.•Competitive evacuations are disorderly and feature bursts of quasi-simultaneous escapes.•Short and long time lapses between escapes alternate, due to a generalised zipper effect.

We study the dynamics of pedestrian flows through a narrow doorway by means of controlled experiments. The influence of the pedestrians' behaviours is investigated by prescribing a selfish attitude to a fraction cs of the participants, while the others behave politely. Thanks to an original setup enabling the re-injection of egressed participants into the room, the analysis is conducted in a (macroscopically) quasi-stationary regime. We find that, as cs is increased, the flow rate J rises, interpolating between published values for egresses in normal conditions and measurements for competitive evacuations. The dependence of several flow properties on the pedestrian density ρ at the door, independently of cs, suggests that macroscopically the behavioural aspects could be subsumed under the density, at least in our specific settings with limited crowd pressure. In particular, under these conditions, J grows monotonically with ρ up to “close-packing” (ρ≈9m−2). The flow is then characterised microscopically. Among other quantities, the time lapses between successive escapes, the pedestrians' waiting times in front of the door, and their angles of incidence are analysed statistically. In a nutshell, our main results show that the flow is orderly for polite crowds, with narrowly distributed time lapses between egresses, while for larger cs the flow gets disorderly and vanishing time lapses emerge. For all cs, we find an alternation between short and long time lapses, which we ascribe to a generalised zipper effect. The average waiting time in the exit zone increases with its occupancy. The disorder in the flow and the pressure felt by participants are also assessed.

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Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Decision Sciences Management Science and Operations Research
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