Abstract
High driver turnover and driver shortage are costly problems in the truckload trucking industry. Extended on-the-road times and low quality of life with irregular schedules and low get-home rates for drivers are commonly attributed as the main culprits in both academic and industry literature. The use of a relay network on which the truckloads switch drivers during their transportation can potentially help reduce drivers’ away-from-home times and regularize their schedule without sacrificing the mileage accumulation on which their pay is determined. Relay network design involves the determination of the relay point (RP) locations, their interconnections, assignment of non-RP nodes to RPs, and the routes for truckloads. Recognizing the importance of considering operational realities such as empty mileage and driver availability along with limited resources, we introduce link capacity constraints and the concept of link imbalance in strategic relay network design. The use of link imbalance is motivated by the need to improve operational efficiency via increased ability to return drivers to their home bases and reduce empty backhauls. To solve our mixed-integer programming design model, we develop an efficient Lagrangean decomposition algorithm that can provide solutions to large-size problems with small optimality gaps within reasonable runtimes. We also present computational experiments on the algorithmic performance, trade-offs between imbalance and cost components, effects of capacity, and the relationship between link- and node-imbalance concepts. The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/trsc.2016.0704 .
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