Abstract

A production/inventory system consisting of a single processor producing three product types and a warehouse is considered. For each product type, the demand process is assumed to be Poisson and the processing time is phase-type. Excess demand is lost. Products have a priority structure and the processor's attention is shared by all the products according to a switching rule. Production of a product continues until its target level is reached. Then, a switch-over takes place if another product needs the processor's attention. A set-up process takes place every time a switch-over occurs. An (R, r) continuous-review inventory control policy is used to start and stop the production of each product. The underlying Markov chain is studied and its steady-state distribution is obtained recursively. Through the recursive procedure, the steady-state balance equations to be dealt with are significantly reduced to a manageable set. The procedure is implemented on a supercomputer and examples are provided to show its efficiency and stability for a range of model parameters. We analyzed the joint behaviors of the inventory levels of the three products as their demand rates increase. Finally we introduced a cost minimizing objective function to guide design efforts. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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