Abstract

The continuous development of high-rise buildings around the world requires the installation of efficient elevator systems able to vertically transport the different passengers along the buildings in their daily journeys. Double deck elevators can increase the efficiency of these vertical transportation systems. Double deck elevators consist of two adjacent cabins that are joined and travel together along the same shaft, so the handling capacity of the system can be improved by allowing the dispatch of passengers with destination to two consecutive floors at the same instant. This type of architecture emerges as especially appropriate for uppeak traffic conditions. However, its suitability has not been sufficiently analysed for non-dominant (up or down) traffic patterns, such as interfloor and lunchpeak traffic. Our paper deals with conventionally controlled double deck elevators, where the Elevator Group Control System (EGCS) requires specific car-landing call allocation algorithms able to manage such special car architectures. Along this line, we propose a genetic algorithm that demonstrated a good performance when compared to a tabu search algorithm that was used as benchmark for comparison, taking into account different fitness evaluation functions (overall dispatching time and nearest call). The analysis was undertaken for interfloor and lunchpeak traffics and the average waiting, transit and journey times, and the energy consumption are reported as performance indexes of the vertical transportation system. The algorithms produced efficient results outperforming the considered benchmark and emerged as very competitive algorithms considering all the performance indexes as a whole. Results were tested using ELEVATE, the standard simulation software for vertical transportation.

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