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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The directed profitable rural postman problem with incompatibility constraints

Marco ColombiIsaac PlanaRenata MansiniJosé M. SanchisÁNgel Corberán

subject

050210 logistics & transportationService (systems architecture)Mathematical optimization021103 operations researchInformation Systems and ManagementGeneral Computer ScienceComputer science05 social sciences0211 other engineering and technologiesContext (language use)Incompatibility constraints02 engineering and technologyManagement Science and Operations ResearchGeneralized independent set problem Incompatibility constraints Routing Rural postman problem Management Science and Operations Research Information Systems and ManagementIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringGeneralized independent set problemDomain (software engineering)Rural postman problemModeling and SimulationIndependent set0502 economics and businessRouting (electronic design automation)MATEMATICA APLICADARouting

description

[EN] In this paper, we study a variant of the directed rural postman problem (RPP) where profits are asso- ciated with arcs to be served, and incompatibility constraints may exist between nodes and profitable arcs leaving them. If convenient, some of the incompatibilities can be removed provided that penalties are paid. The problem looks for a tour starting and ending at the depot that maximizes the difference between collected profits and total cost as sum of traveling costs and paid penalties, while satisfying remaining incompatibilities. The problem finds application in the domain of road transportation service, and in particular in the context of horizontal collaboration among carriers and shippers. We call this problem the directed profitable rural postman problem with incompatibility constraints. We propose two problem formulations and introduce a matheuristic procedure exploiting the presence of a variant of the generalized independent set problem (GISP) and of the directed rural postman problem (DRPP) as sub- problems. Computational results show how the matheuristic is effective outperforming in many cases the result obtained in one hour computing time by a straightforward branch-and-cut approach implemented with IBM CPLEX 12.6.2 on instances with up to 500 nodes, 1535 arcs, 1132 profitable arcs, and 10,743 incompatibilities.

10.1016/j.ejor.2017.02.002http://hdl.handle.net/11379/491503