Searching for just a few words should be enough to get started. If you need to make more complex queries, use the tips below to guide you.
Issue title: MANUFACTURING AND DESIGN
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Phadnis, Shardul | Brevick, Jerald | Irani, Shahrukh
Affiliations: Russell William Ltd, 1710 Midway Rd, Odenton, MD 21113, U.S.A. | Department of Industrial, Welding and Systems Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, U.S.A.
Abstract: The flow-shop scheduling problem has been extensively studied in literature. Many researchers have developed various flow-shop scheduling algorithms and heuristics for a variety of cases. The problem of scheduling flow-shops with three or more stages has been shown to be NP-Complete in strong sense. Complexity of the problem increases if one or more of the flow-shop stages have multiple identical (parallel) machines. Flow-shops with parallel machines are quite common in practice, yet comparatively limited amount of research has been performed in the area. In this research work a heuristic procedure, Progressive Bottleneck Improvement (PBI) procedure, is developed for scheduling flow-shops with parallel machines to minimize makespan. This heuristic schedules a set of jobs by identifying the bottleneck stages in the flow-shop, and schedules jobs to improve the overall bottleneck performance. One of the problems in achieving this is that there exists no algorithm that can exactly identify the bottleneck stage in a flow-shop with parallel machines. The PBI heuristic overcomes this difficulty by recalculating the bottleneck every time it sequences a job. The initial sequence thus developed is later improved using certain improvement rules. The heuristic is tested using random data and the datasets used by Wittrock (1988) and Cheng et al. (2001). This paper presents the heuristic and then posts the results obtained.
Keywords: Scheduling, sequencing, flow-shop, parallel machines
Journal: Journal of Integrated Design & Process Science, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 87-97, 2003
IOS Press, Inc.
6751 Tepper Drive
Clifton, VA 20124
USA
Tel: +1 703 830 6300
Fax: +1 703 830 2300
[email protected]
For editorial issues, like the status of your submitted paper or proposals, write to [email protected]
IOS Press
Nieuwe Hemweg 6B
1013 BG Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Tel: +31 20 688 3355
Fax: +31 20 687 0091
[email protected]
For editorial issues, permissions, book requests, submissions and proceedings, contact the Amsterdam office [email protected]
Inspirees International (China Office)
Ciyunsi Beili 207(CapitaLand), Bld 1, 7-901
100025, Beijing
China
Free service line: 400 661 8717
Fax: +86 10 8446 7947
[email protected]
For editorial issues, like the status of your submitted paper or proposals, write to [email protected]
如果您在出版方面需要帮助或有任何建, 件至: [email protected]