Abstract

ABSTRACT Human–robot collaboration has been incorporated into production and assembly processes to promote system flexibility, changeability and adaptability. However, it poses new challenges to resource allocation and production scheduling due to its intrinsic uncertainty and also the increasing complexity of resources. This paper investigates a stochastic flow shop scheduling problem in the context of human–robot collaboration. The goal is to achieve efficient utilisation of flexible resources including human workers and cobots and take full advantage of human–robot collaboration in production scheduling. A stochastic Cobb–Douglas production function is utilised to evaluate the production efficiency of human–robot collaboration considering instabilities of human performance. A joint chance-constrained programming model is formulated to ensure that the required system performance can be achieved. A CVaR approximation-based approach is proposed to solve the formulated model with mixed-integer variables and a nonconvex constraint. The effectiveness of the formulated model and the efficiency of the proposed solution approach are evaluated via numerical experiments. Computational results show the superiority of our solution approach over three other approaches including Bonferroni approximation, scenario approach and individual chance-constrained programming.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call