Minimizing the expected maximum lateness for a job shop subject to stochastic machine breakdowns

This paper addresses a stochastic job shop scheduling problem with sequence-dependent setup times, aiming to minimize the expected maximum lateness. The stochastic nature is modeled by considering uncertain times between failures (TBF) and uncertain times to repair (TTR). To tackle this problem, a s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of operations research 2024-07, Vol.338 (1), p.801-833
Hauptverfasser: Zambrano-Rey, Gabriel Mauricio, González-Neira, Eliana María, Forero-Ortiz, Gabriel Fernando, Ocampo-Monsalve, María José, Rivera-Torres, Andrea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper addresses a stochastic job shop scheduling problem with sequence-dependent setup times, aiming to minimize the expected maximum lateness. The stochastic nature is modeled by considering uncertain times between failures (TBF) and uncertain times to repair (TTR). To tackle this problem, a simheuristic approach is proposed, which combines a tabu search (TS) algorithm with Monte Carlo simulation. A total of 320 instances were used to conduct multiple experiments. Instances were generated with two distributions to study the behavior of stochastic TTR and TBF under log-normal and exponential distributions. Firstly, the performance of the simheuristic was evaluated for small instances by comparing it with the simulation of optimal solutions obtained with a mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) model. The simheuristic approach demonstrated an average improvement of around 7% compared to the simulation of MILP model solutions. Secondly, the simheuristic performance was evaluated for medium and large-size instances by comparing it with the simulation of the solutions obtained by the earliest due date (EDD) and process time plus work in the next queue plus negative slack (PT + WINQ + SL) dispatching rules. The results showed an average improvement of around 11% compared to EDD and 14% compared to PT + WINQ + SL. Furthermore, the results highlight that even when the two distributions have the same expected value and coefficient of variation, they can yield different expected maximum lateness values. This emphasizes the importance of precise distribution fitting when solving real cases to achieve effective scheduling performance.
ISSN:0254-5330
1572-9338
DOI:10.1007/s10479-023-05592-z