Abstract

Inspired by long-distance road transport in industrial logistics in China, this paper studies a simultaneous loading scheduling and vehicle routing problem over a multi-workday planning horizon. Industrial cargo often requires specialized facilities, and these facilities vary in performance and quantity and are subject to available time constraints. Consequently, achieving coordinated optimization of vehicle routing and loading scheduling becomes a significant challenge in practice. We describe the studied problem as a multi-trip vehicle routing problem with time windows and resource synchronization on heterogeneous facilities. First, we develop a mixed integer programming model in a multi-workday setting to minimize the total travel distance and the number of vehicles. Moreover, a three-phase heuristic approach is developed. An initial solution is constructed using a sequential strategy in the first phase, and then an adaptive large neighbourhood search and a post-optimization procedure based on ejection chains are, respectively, designed to optimize the two hierarchical objective functions. Finally, extensive computational experiments are conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method. Specifically, the research results indicate that in long-distance road transport in industrial scenarios, expanding the planning horizon from a single workday to a multi-workday period could significantly reduce logistics operational costs and improve service quality.

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