Abstract

The Storage Location Assignment Problem (SLAP) is of central importance in warehouse operations. An important research challenge lies in generalizing the SLAP such that it is not tied to certain order-picking methodologies, constraints, or warehouse layouts. We propose the OBP-based SLAP, where the quality of a location assignment is obtained by optimizing an Order Batching Problem (OBP). For the optimization of the OBP-based SLAP, we propose a nested Metropolis algorithm. The algorithm includes an OBP-optimizer to obtain the cost of an assignment, as well as a filter which approximates OBP costs using a model based on the Quadratic Assignment Problem (QAP). In experiments, we tune two key parameters in the QAP model, and test whether its predictive quality warrants its use within the SLAP optimizer. Results show that the QAP model’s per-sample accuracy is only marginally better than a random baseline, but that it delivers predictions much faster than the OBP optimizer, implying that it can be used as an effective filter. We then run the SLAP optimizer with and without using the QAP model on industrial data. We observe a cost improvement of around 23% over 1 h with the QAP model, and 17% without it. We share results for public instances on the TSPLIB format.

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