The Flexible Scheduled Service Network Design Problem

Author(s):  
Mike Hewitt

The scheduled service network design problem (SSNDP) can support planning the transportation operations of consolidation carriers given shipment-level service commitments regarding available and due times. These available and due times impact transportation costs by constraining potential consolidation opportunities. However, such available and due times may be changed, either because of negotiations with customers or redesigned internal operations to increase shipment consolidation and reduce transportation costs. As changing these times can lead to customer service and operational issues, we presume a carrier seeks to do so for a limited number of shipments. We propose a new variant of the SSNDP, the flexible scheduled service network design problem, that identifies the shipments for which these times should be changed to minimize total transportation and handling costs. We present a solution approach for this problem that outperforms a commercial optimization solver on instances derived from the operations of a U.S. less-than-truckload freight transportation carrier. With an extensive computational study, we study the savings potential of leveraging flexibility and the operational settings that are fertile ground for doing so.

2020 ◽  
Vol 141 ◽  
pp. 164-195
Author(s):  
Yannick Oskar Scherr ◽  
Mike Hewitt ◽  
Bruno Albert Neumann Saavedra ◽  
Dirk Christian Mattfeld

2017 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 1303-1321 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natashia Boland ◽  
Mike Hewitt ◽  
Luke Marshall ◽  
Martin Savelsbergh

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Jie Xiao ◽  
Yi Xie ◽  
Haowei Yu ◽  
Hongying Yan

Effective railway freight transportation relies on a well-designed train service network. This paper investigates the train service network design problem at the tactical level for the Chinese railway system. It aims to determine the types of train services to be offered, how many trains of each service are to be dispatched per day (service frequency), and by which train services shipments are to be transported. An integer programming model is proposed to address this problem. The optimization model considers both through train services between nonadjacent yards, and two classes of service between two adjacent yards ( i.e., shuttle train services directly from one yard to its adjacent yard, and local train services that make at least one intermediate stop). The objective of the model is to optimize the transportation of all the shipments with minimal costs. The costs consist of accumulation costs, classification coststrain operation costs, and train travel costs. The NP-hard nature of the problem prevents an exact solution algorithm from finding the optimal solution within a reasonable time, even for small-scale cases. Therefore, an improved genetic algorithm is designed and employed here. To demonstrate the proposed model and the algorithm, a case study on a real-world sub-network in China is carried out. The computational results show that the proposed approach can obtain high-quality solutions with satisfactory speed. Moreover, comparative analysis on a case that assumes all the shuttle train services between any two adjacent yards to be provided without optimization reveals some interesting insights.


Symmetry ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boliang Lin ◽  
Jianping Wu ◽  
Jiaxi Wang ◽  
Jingsong Duan ◽  
Yinan Zhao

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