Effect of inspection errors and preventive maintenance on a two-stage production inventory system

2007 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 301-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. Darwish ◽  
M. Ben-Daya

In this paper two similar models for the maintenance of a production-inventory system are considered. In both models, an input generating installation supplies a buffer with a raw material and a production unit pulls the raw material from the buffer. The installation in the first model and the production unit in the second model deteriorate stochastically over time and the problem of their optimal preventive maintenance is considered. In the first model, it is assumed that the installation, after the completion of its maintenance, remains idle until the buffer is evacuated, while in the second model, it is assumed that the production unit, after the completion of its maintenance, remains idle until the buffer is filled up. The preventive and corrective repair times of the installation in the first model and the preventive and corrective repair times of the production unit in the second model are continuous random variables with known probability density functions. Under a suitable cost structure, semi-Markov decision processes are considered for both models in order to find a policy that minimizes the long-run expected average cost per unit time. A great number of numerical examples provide strong evidence that, for each fixed buffer content, the average-cost optimal policy is of control-limit type in both models, i.e. it prescribes a preventive maintenance of the installation in the first model and a preventive maintenance of the production unit in the second model if and only if their degree of deterioration is greater than or equal to a critical level. Using the usual regenerative argument, the average cost of the optimal control-limit policy is computed exactly in both models. Four numerical examples are also presented in which the preventive and corrective repair times follow the Exponential, the Weibull, the Gamma and the Log-Normal distribution, respectively.


Author(s):  
Guoqing Cheng ◽  
Binghai Zhou ◽  
Faqun Qi ◽  
Ling Li

In this article, we consider an imperfect production-inventory system which produces a single type of product to meet the constant demand. The system deteriorates stochastically with usage and the deterioration process is modeled by a non-stationary gamma process. The production process is imperfect which means that the system produces some non-conforming items and the product quality depends on the degradation level of the production system. To prevent the system from deteriorating worse and improve the product quality, preventive maintenance is performed when the level of the system degradation reaches a certain threshold. However, the preventive maintenance is imperfect which cannot restore the system as good as new. Hence, the aging system will be replaced by a new one after some production cycles. The preventive maintenance cost, the replacement cost, the production cost, the inventory holding cost and the penalty cost of lost sales are considered in this article. The objective is to minimize the total cost per unit item which depends on two decision variables: the preventive maintenance threshold and the time at which the system is replaced. We derive the explicit expression of the total cost per unit item and the optimal joint policy can be obtained numerically. An illustrative example and sensitivity analysis are given to demonstrate the proposed model.


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