2022
Autores
Homayouni, SM; Fontes, DBMM;
Publicação
Springer Optimization and Its Applications
Abstract
Maritime transportation has been, historically, a major factor in economic development and prosperity since it enables trade and contacts between nations. The amount of trade through maritime transport has increased drastically; for example, about 90% of the European Union’s external trade and one-third of its internal trade depend on maritime transport. Major ports, typically, incorporate multiple terminals serving containerships, railways, and other forms of hinterland transportation and require interterminal and intraterminal container transport. Many factors influence the productivity and efficiency of ports and hence their economic viability. Moreover, environmental concerns have been leading to stern regulation that requires ports to reduce, for example, greenhouse gas emissions. Therefore, port authorities need to balance economic and ecological objectives in order to ensure sustainable growth and to remain competitive. Once a containership moors at a container terminal, several quay cranes are assigned to the ship to load/unload the containers to/from the ship. Loading activities require the containers to have been previously made available at the quayside, while unloading ones require the containers to be removed from the quayside. The containers are transported between the quayside and the storage yard by a set of vehicles. This chapter addresses the intraterminal container transport scheduling problem by simultaneously scheduling the loading/unloading activities of quay cranes and the transport (between the quayside and the storage yard) activities of vehicles. In addition, the problem includes vehicles with adjustable travelling speed, a characteristic never considered in this context. For this problem, we propose bi-objective mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) models aiming at minimizing the makespan and the total energy consumption simultaneously. Computational experiments are conducted on benchmark instances that we also propose. The computational results show the effectiveness of the MILP models as well as the impact of considering vehicles with adjustable speed, which can reduce the makespan by up to 16.2% and the total energy consumption by up to 2.5%. Finally, we also show that handling unloading and loading activities simultaneously rather than sequentially (the usual practice rule) can improve the makespan by up to 34.5% and the total energy consumption by up to 18.3%. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
2022
Autores
Fontes, DBMM; Homayouni, SM; Resende, MGC;
Publicação
JOURNAL OF COMBINATORIAL OPTIMIZATION
Abstract
This paper proposes a new problem by integrating the job shop scheduling, the part feeding, and the automated storage and retrieval problems. These three problems are intertwined and the performance of each of these problems influences and is influenced by the performance of the other problems. We consider a manufacturing environment composed of a set of machines (production system) connected by a transport system and a storage/retrieval system. Jobs are retrieved from storage and delivered to a load/unload area (LU) by the automated storage retrieval system. Then they are transported to and between the machines where their operations are processed on by the transport system. Once all operations of a job are processed, the job is taken back to the LU and then returned to the storage cell. We propose a mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) model that can be solved to optimality for small-sized instances. We also propose a hybrid simulated annealing (HSA) algorithm to find good quality solutions for larger instances. The HSA incorporates a late acceptance hill-climbing algorithm and a multistart strategy to promote both intensification and exploration while decreasing computational requirements. To compute the optimality gap of the HSA solutions, we derive a very fast lower bounding procedure. Computational experiments are conducted on two sets of instances that we also propose. The computational results show the effectiveness of the MILP on small-sized instances as well as the effectiveness, efficiency, and robustness of the HSA on medium and large-sized instances. Furthermore, the computational experiments clearly shown that importance of optimizing the three problems simultaneous. Finally, the importance and relevance of including the storage/retrieval activities are empirically demonstrated as ignoring them leads to wrong and misleading results.
2021
Autores
Homayouni, SM; Fontes, DBMM;
Publicação
JOURNAL OF GLOBAL OPTIMIZATION
Abstract
This paper addresses an extension of the flexible job shop scheduling problem by considering that jobs need to be moved around the shop-floor by a set of vehicles. Thus, this problem involves assigning each production operation to one of the alternative machines, finding the sequence of operations for each machine, assigning each transport task to one of the vehicles, and finding the sequence of transport tasks for each vehicle, simultaneously. Transportation is usually neglected in the literature and when considered, an unlimited number of vehicles is, typically, assumed. Here, we propose the first mixed integer linear programming model for this problem and show its efficiency at solving small-sized instances to optimality. In addition, and due to the NP-hard nature of the problem, we propose a local search based heuristic that the computational experiments show to be effective, efficient, and robust.
2022
Autores
Homayouni, SM; Fontes, DBMM; Fontes, FACC;
Publicação
Metaheuristics - 14th International Conference, MIC 2022, Syracuse, Italy, July 11-14, 2022, Proceedings
Abstract
2023
Autores
Homayouni, SM; Fontes, DBMM; Goncalves, JF;
Publicação
INTERNATIONAL TRANSACTIONS IN OPERATIONAL RESEARCH
Abstract
This work addresses the flexible job shop scheduling problem with transportation (FJSPT), which can be seen as an extension of both the flexible job shop scheduling problem (FJSP) and the job shop scheduling problem with transportation (JSPT). Regarding the former case, the FJSPT additionally considers that the jobs need to be transported to the machines on which they are processed on, while in the latter, the specific machine processing each operation also needs to be decided. The FJSPT is NP-hard since it extends NP-hard problems. Good-quality solutions are efficiently found by an operation-based multistart biased random key genetic algorithm (BRKGA) coupled with greedy heuristics to select the machine processing each operation and the vehicles transporting the jobs to operations. The proposed approach outperforms state-of-the-art solution approaches since it finds very good quality solutions in a short time. Such solutions are optimal for most problem instances. In addition, the approach is robust, which is a very important characteristic in practical applications. Finally, due to its modular structure, the multistart BRKGA can be easily adapted to solve other similar scheduling problems, as shown in the computational experiments reported in this paper.
2023
Autores
Homayouni, SM; Fontes, DBMM; Fontes, FACC;
Publicação
METAHEURISTICS, MIC 2022
Abstract
Energy-efficient scheduling has become a new trend in industry and academia, mainly due to extreme weather conditions, stricter environmental regulations, and volatile energy prices. This work addresses the energy-efficient Job shop Scheduling Problem with speed adjustable machines. Thus, in addition to determining the sequence of the operations for each machine, one also needs to decide on the processing speed of each operation. We propose a multi-population biased random key genetic algorithm that finds effective solutions to the problem efficiently and outperforms the state-of-the-art solution approaches.
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