Exact methods and lower bounds for the Oven Scheduling Problem
The Oven Scheduling Problem (OSP) is a new parallel batch scheduling problem that arises in the area of electronic component manufacturing. Jobs need to be scheduled to one of several ovens and may be processed simultaneously in one batch if they have compatible requirements. The scheduling of jobs...
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Zusammenfassung: | The Oven Scheduling Problem (OSP) is a new parallel batch scheduling problem
that arises in the area of electronic component manufacturing. Jobs need to be
scheduled to one of several ovens and may be processed simultaneously in one
batch if they have compatible requirements. The scheduling of jobs must respect
several constraints concerning eligibility and availability of ovens, release
dates of jobs, setup times between batches as well as oven capacities. Running
the ovens is highly energy-intensive and thus the main objective, besides
finishing jobs on time, is to minimize the cumulative batch processing time
across all ovens. This objective distinguishes the OSP from other batch
processing problems which typically minimize objectives related to makespan,
tardiness or lateness.
We propose to solve this NP-hard scheduling problem via constraint
programming (CP) and integer linear programming (ILP) and present corresponding
models. For an experimental evaluation, we introduce a multi-parameter random
instance generator to provide a diverse set of problem instances. Using
state-of-the-art solvers, we evaluate the quality and compare the performance
of our CP- and ILP-models. We show that our models can find feasible solutions
for instances of realistic size, many of those being provably optimal or nearly
optimal solutions. Finally, we derive theoretical lower bounds on the solution
cost of feasible solutions to the OSP; these can be computed within a few
seconds. We show that these lower bounds are competitive with those derived by
state-of-the-art solvers. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2203.12517 |