scholarly journals A Disassembly Planning Information Model for Disassembly Sequencing Problem

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Utpal Roy
2007 ◽  
pp. 251-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mukul Tripathi ◽  
Shubham Agrawal ◽  
M Tiwari

Author(s):  
Ahmed ElSayed ◽  
Elif A. Kongar ◽  
Surendra M. Gupta

Electronic products enter the waste stream rapidly due to technological enhancements. Their parts and material recovery involve significant economic and environmental gain. To regain the value added to such products a certain level of disassembly may be required. Disassembly operations are often expensive and the complexity of determining the best disassembly sequence increases as the number of parts in a product grows. Therefore, it is necessary to develop methodologies for obtaining optimal or near optimal disassembly sequences to ensure efficient recovery process. To that end, this chapter introduces a Genetic Algorithm based methodology to develop disassembly sequencing for end-of-life products. A numerical example is presented to provide and demonstrate better understating and functionality of the algorithm.


2015 ◽  
Vol 813-814 ◽  
pp. 1165-1169
Author(s):  
B. Josephin Sajo ◽  
J. Jayaprakash

Disassembly sequence planning not only reduces product life cycle cost, but also greatly influences environmental impact. Industrial recycling and remanufacturing involves product disassembly to retrieve the desired parts and/or subassemblies by separating a product into its constituents. Disassembly has recently gained a great deal of attention in the literature due to its role in product recovery. Disassembly sequencing and planning is more challenging than assembly because its terminal goal is not necessarily fixed, but may depend on product usage and market demands for used parts and recycled materials. Moreover, disassembly is accompanied by more uncertainty in system structures and component conditions than is assembly. This paper presents recent methods for sequencing and process planning in disassembly and the applications to industrial products. This research is aimed at determining the optimal disassembly sequence as well as the helps to find the sequence dependent cost.


Author(s):  
Bicheng Zhu ◽  
Utpal Roy

Disassembly, as one of the core steps in the End of Life (EOL) activities, has been a popular topic of research in both industrial and academic areas. It not only reduces product lifecycle cost, but also substantially influences environmental impact. Although different methods have been proposed for tackling different aspects of the disassembly planning problems, certain gaps still exist. For example, in the case of the disassembly sequencing, traditional methods focus mainly on the geometry and topology constraints, but omit the important technical constraints like force (gravity), connector type, etc.; it makes these methods less efficient and realistic. Also, the determination of an optimal disassembly sequence requires an extensive exchange and sharing of the disassembly related knowledge among the different stakeholders like manufacturers, product designers, maintenance staffs and material engineers. A mechanism to support such information interoperability is important in the disassembly process. In order to address those research issues, this paper proposes a Semantic Web based Disassembly Planning Framework. In the framework, the proposed “Disassembly Core Ontology” (DCO) serves as a formal, explicit information core for different users like product designer and disassembler. By exploiting the rich semantic knowledge (like gravity, connector type, etc.) that has been explicitly embedded in the proposed DCO, it has been demonstrated that the semantic web approach has potentials to address both efficiency- and interoperability-related issues in disassembly planning problems.


2008 ◽  
Vol 35 (12) ◽  
pp. 3989-3997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Belarmino Adenso-Díaz ◽  
Santiago García-Carbajal ◽  
Surendra M. Gupta

Author(s):  
Bicheng Zhu ◽  
Utpal Roy

Disassembly, a process of separating the end of life (EOL) product into discrete components for re-utilizing their associated residual values, is an important enabler for the sustainable manufacturing. This work focuses on the modeling of the disassembly planning related information and develops a disassembly information model (DIM) based on an extensive investigation of various informational aspects in the domain of disassembly planning. The developed DIM, which represents an appropriate systematization and classification of the products, processes, uncertainties, and degradations related information, follows a layered modeling methodology in which DIM is subdivided into layers with the intent to separate general knowledge into different levels of abstractions and reach a balance between information reusability and information usability. Two prototype disassembly planning related applications have been incorporated to validate the usability and reusability of the developed DIM.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Surendra M. Gupta ◽  
Evren Erbis ◽  
Seamus M. McGovern

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