Abstract

This application is motivated by a complex real-world scheduling problem found in the bottleneck workstation of the production line of an automotive safety glass manufacturing facility. The scheduling problem consists of scheduling jobs (glass parts) on a number of parallel batch processing machines (furnaces), assigning each job to a batch, and sequencing the batches on each machine. The two main objectives are to maximize the utilization of the parallel machines and to minimize the delay in the completion date of each job in relation to a required due date (specific for each job). Aside from the main objectives, the output batches should also produce a balanced workload on the parallel machines, balanced job due dates within each batch, and minimal capacity loss in the batches. The scheduling problem also considers a batch capacity constraint, sequence-dependent processing times, incompatible product families, additional resources, and machine capability. We propose a two-phase heuristic approach that combines exact methods with search heuristics. The first phase comprises a four-stage mixed-integer linear program for building the batches; the second phase is based on a Greedy Randomized Adaptive Search Procedure for sequencing the batches assigned to each machine. We conducted experiments on instances with up to 100 jobs built with real data from the manufacturing facility. The results are encouraging both in terms of computing time--5 min in average--and quality of the solutions--less than 10 % relative gap from the optimal solution in the first phase and less than 5 % in the second phase. Additional experiments were conducted on randomly generated instances of small, medium, and large size.

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