A Vertiport Design Heuristic to Ensure Efficient Ground Operations for Urban Air Mobility

Lukas Preis, Mirko Hornung

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Urban Air Mobility is a novel concept of transportation with unknown market potential. Even in conservative estimates, thousands of operations could be expected on a single vertiport. This exceeds known heliport operations, which is the most comparable existing mode of transport—by far. Vertiport operations, in particular the dynamics on the airfield, are not well understood; in the following article, we want to address this research gap. By using means of agent-based simulation, the following design drivers were identified: peaks in demand, imbalance between arrivals and departures, pad operations and gate operations. We calculate a practical hourly capacity of 264 movements for our baseline scenario consisting of 4 pads, 12 gates and 20 stand. We are further able to shown that avoiding this peak and staying below a maximum imbalance between arrivals and departures of less than 33 ensures an average passenger delay of less than 3 min. Lastly, we present a parameter study varying the number of pads and gates, the length of approach/departure and boarding/de-boarding and the level of demand. The results of this study are aggregated into a graphical design heuristic displaying the interchangeability of the mentioned aspects.

Original languageEnglish
Article number7260
JournalApplied Sciences (Switzerland)
Volume12
Issue number14
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2022

Keywords

  • agent-based simulation
  • design heuristic
  • operational delay
  • practical capacity
  • urban air mobility
  • vertiport

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