scholarly journals Solving a flow shop scheduling problem with missing operations in an Industry 4.0 production environment

2021 ◽  
pp. 33-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Alejandro Rossit ◽  
Adrián Toncovich ◽  
Diego Gabriel Rossit ◽  
Sergio Nesmachnow

Industry 4.0 is a modern approach that aims at enhancing the connectivity between the different stages of the production process and the requirements of consumers. This paper addresses a relevant problem for both Industry 4.0 and flow shop literature: the missing operations flow shop scheduling problem. In general, in order to reduce the computational effort required to solve flow shop scheduling problems only permutation schedules (PFS) are considered, i.e., the same job sequence is used for all the machines involved. However, considering only PFS is not a constraint that is based on the real-world conditions of the industrial environments, and it is only a simplification strategy used frequently in the literature. Moreover, non-permutation (NPFS) orderings may be used for most of the real flow shop systems, i.e., different job schedules can be used for different machines in the production line, since NPFS solutions usually outperform the PFS ones. In this work, a novel mathematical formulation to minimize total tardiness and a resolution method, which considers both PFS and (the more computationally expensive) NPFS solutions, are presented to solve the flow shop scheduling problem with missing operations. The solution approach has two stages. First, a Genetic Algorithm, which only considers PFS solutions, is applied to solve the scheduling problem. The resulting solution is then improved in the second stage by means of a Simulated Annealing algorithm that expands the search space by considering NPFS solutions. The experimental tests were performed on a set of instances considering varying proportions of missing operations, as it is usual in the Industry 4.0 production environment. The results show that NPFS solutions clearly outperform PFS solutions for this problem.

Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 1131
Author(s):  
Anita Agárdi ◽  
Károly Nehéz ◽  
Olivér Hornyák ◽  
László T. Kóczy

This paper deals with the flow shop scheduling problem. To find the optimal solution is an NP-hard problem. The paper reviews some algorithms from the literature and applies a benchmark dataset to evaluate their efficiency. In this research work, the discrete bacterial memetic evolutionary algorithm (DBMEA) as a global searcher was investigated. The proposed algorithm improves the local search by applying the simulated annealing algorithm (SA). This paper presents the experimental results of solving the no-idle flow shop scheduling problem. To compare the proposed algorithm with other researchers’ work, a benchmark problem set was used. The calculated makespan times were compared against the best-known solutions in the literature. The proposed hybrid algorithm has provided better results than methods using genetic algorithm variants, thus it is a major improvement for the memetic algorithm family solving production scheduling problems.


Author(s):  
FENG JIN ◽  
SHI-JI SONG ◽  
CHENG WU

Beam search algorithm, as an adaptation of branch and bound method, is regarded as one of the effective approaches in solving combinational optimization problems. In this paper, a new beam search algorithm for the large-scale permutation flow shop scheduling problem (FSP) is proposed. A new branching scheme is addressed and compared with the traditional branching scheme. With the new branching scheme, the number of partial schedules in the search tree can be greatly reduced. Based on a simple simulated annealing algorithm, partial schedules are globally evaluated. Numerical experiments show that good solutions of large-scale FSPs could be found with the proposed algorithm in a short time.


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