TITEL
Inventory control and scheduling problems in a single-machine multi-item system
FöRFATTARE
Brander, Pär
INSTITUTION
Industriell ekonomi och samhällsvetenskap / Industriell logistik
SAMMANFATTNING
This Doctoral Thesis addresses the topic of inventory control and
scheduling in a single-machine multi-item system. Specifically, it
considers a group of items processed, one at a time, on a single facility.
Single-machine multi-item systems occur frequently in practice and apply
both in continuous flow processes and batch flow processes. For instance,
areas of applicability could include metal stamping, bottling, paper
production, food processing, plastic extrusion, printing, and chemical
batch production among others. In these cases, it is common to use cyclic
schedules for the processing of items.
The thesis contains an introductory part and five papers. Two papers
present heuristics for determination of cyclic schedules assuming sequence-
dependent setups. First, a reverse logistics system, where used products
are disassembled, is considered. In this case, setup costs are assumed to
be directly proportional to setup times. The heuristic results in
disassembly frequencies, idle time, and the sequence in which the items
should be processed. The second paper considers production settings and
assumes setup costs not directly proportional to setup times. The heuristic
presented in that paper also results in frequencies, idle time, and the
sequence in which to process the items. These two papers assume
deterministic environments.
The remaining three papers consider stochastic environments and present
planning and control models to be applied under these circumstances. One
paper applies deterministic lot sizing models to stationary stochastic
demands in a simulation study. A control model is also developed in the
paper in order to make the decision for which item to produce and when to
produce it. The remaining two papers present planning and control models
for determination of safety stocks and order-up-to levels when items are
produced in a fixed cyclic schedule. The models can be applied in
environments with stochastic demands, stochastic operation times, and
stochastic setup times or combinations thereof.
The papers in this thesis can be combined in different ways and hence cover
a variety of industries and practical applications. Practitioners in the
area of production and inventory control would then get models for planning
and controlling the processing of multiple items on a single facility. The
models are preferably implemented in computerized Enterprise Resource
Planning (ERP)-systems at manufacturing companies.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--05/55--SE / NR 2005:55
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