6533b86efe1ef96bd12cc984

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A decomposition approach to dual shuttle automated storage and retrieval systems

Jan ChristiaensRamón Alvarez-valdésTony WautersFulgencia VillaGreet Van Den Berghe

subject

0209 industrial biotechnologyMathematical optimizationGeneral Computer ScienceComputer scienceESTADISTICA E INVESTIGACION OPERATIVA0211 other engineering and technologiesLogistics02 engineering and technologyAutomated storage and retrieval systemsSet (abstract data type)Dual shuttle020901 industrial engineering & automationDecomposition (computer science)HeuristicsMetaheuristicDecomposition021103 operations researchBranch and boundHeuristicControl policiesGeneral EngineeringWarehouseDual (category theory)Decomposition method (constraint satisfaction)Heuristics

description

[EN] Automated Storage and Retrieval Systems (AS/RS) have become vital in today¿s distribution and production environments, however it remains necessary to equip them with more efficient operational control policies. Motivated by real situations encountered by companies employing AS/RS, the present paper studies a miniload AS/RS system, with a dual shuttle crane in which a set of storage and retrieval requests must be scheduled such that the prioritized waiting time is minimized. Dual shuttle cranes have received minimal academic attention and thus continue to pose new problems that must be solved. The miniload AS/RS problem is addressed by decomposing it into a location assignment and sequencing problem. Different heuristic strategies are introduced for making the assignments, while a general mathematical model and efficient branch and bound procedure are proposed for optimizing the sequence. Additionally, a fast metaheuristic capable of solving larger instances is also developed. A set of realworld based benchmarks with varying characteristics is generated to evaluate the proposed methods. Very small instances prove the only for which optimal sequences are found in reasonable calculation time. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the heuristic decomposition method.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cie.2016.09.013