I.T.S Engineering College: Seminar On Density Based Traffic Light Control
I.T.S Engineering College: Seminar On Density Based Traffic Light Control
I.T.S Engineering College: Seminar On Density Based Traffic Light Control
S ENGINEERING COLLEGE
SEMINAR ON
DENSITY BASED TRAFFIC LIGHT CONTROL
Under the guidance of
Mrs. Jai Singh
Presented by
.
CIRCUIT DIAGRAM:
INPUT SENSORS:
OPERATION
Also we have a junction where three lights (green, amber and red) are arranged on
all four sides. We have three pairs of sensors across the roads marking as low, medium
and high density zones respectively.
There will be a infrared transmitter and infrared receiver opposite to each other. We
will place sensors at some distance apart from another pair .
When vehicles are filled and cross the first pair of sensors, then there will be an
obstacle between transmitter and receiver and this leads to a digital signal (low or
high) and the microcontroller assumes that there is low density traffic.
When the vehicle crosses second sensor then it assumes medium density and for
third sensor pair high density traffic respectively.
For high density traffic there will be more allotment of time and for low density
low time respectively. Program written to the microcontroller will make it to do the
operation.
So the microcontroller will send its timing signal output by comparing with the
adjacent road’s traffic.
When the vehicle crosses second sensor then it assumes medium density and for
third sensor pair high density traffic respectively.
For high density traffic there will be more allotment of time and for low density
low time respectively. Program written to the microcontroller will make it to do the
operation.
So the microcontroller will send its timing signal output by comparing with the
adjacent road’s traffic.
FEATURES:
• Compatible with MCS-51™ Products
• 4K Bytes of In-System Reprogrammable Flash Memory
– Endurance: 1,000 Write/Erase Cycles
• Fully Static Operation: 0 Hz to 24 MHz
• Three-Level Program Memory Lock
• 128 x 8-Bit Internal RAM
• 32 Programmable I/O Lines
• Two 16-Bit Timer/Counters
• Six Interrupt Sources
• Programmable Serial Channel
• Low Power Idle and Power Down Modes
DESCRIPTION:
Density based traffic light control have many advantages compared to time
based traffic control.
We can save considerable amount of time
we can avoid unnecessary occurrence of traffic jams which causes public
inconvenience.
Thus from above theory we can conclude that using the method of density
based control of traffic lights we can save a considerable amount of time and also we
can prevent excessive traffic jams thus leading to smooth traffic flow.