7,574 research outputs found

    Dynamic approach to solve the daily drayage problem with travel time uncertainty

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    The intermodal transport chain can become more e cient by means of a good organization of drayage movements. Drayage in intermodal container terminals involves the pick up and delivery of containers at customer locations, and the main objective is normally the assignment of transportation tasks to the di erent vehicles, often with the presence of time windows. This scheduling has traditionally been done once a day and, under these conditions, any unexpected event could cause timetable delays. We propose to use the real-time knowledge about vehicle position to solve this problem, which permanently allows the planner to reassign tasks in case the problem conditions change. This exact knowledge of the position of the vehicles is possible using a geographic positioning system by satellite (GPS, Galileo, Glonass), and the results show that this additional data can be used to dynamically improve the solution

    Vehicle Routing with Traffic Congestion and Drivers' Driving and Working Rules

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    For the intensively studied vehicle routing problem (VRP), two real-life restrictions have received only minor attention in the VRP-literature: traffic congestion and driving hours regulations. Traffic congestion causes late arrivals at customers and long travel times resulting in large transport costs. To account for traffic congestion, time-dependent travel times should be considered when constructing vehicle routes. Next, driving hours regulations, which restrict the available driving and working times for truck drivers, must be respected. Since violations are severely fined, also driving hours regulations should be considered when constructing vehicle routes, even more in combination with congestion problems. The objective of this paper is to develop a solution method for the VRP with time windows (VRPTW), time-dependent travel times, and driving hours regulations. The major difficulty of this VRPTW extension is to optimize each vehicle’s departure times to minimize the duty time of each driver. Having compact duty times leads to cost savings. However, obtaining compact duty times is much harder when time-dependent travel times and driving hours regulations are considered. We propose a restricted dynamic programming (DP) heuristic for constructing the vehicles routes, and an efficient heuristic for optimizing the vehicle’s departure times for each (partial) vehicle route, such that the complete solution algorithm runs in polynomial time. Computational experiments emonstrate the trade-off between travel distance minimization and duty time minimization, and illustrate the cost savings of extending the depot opening hours such that traveling before the morning peak and after the evening peak becomes possible

    Enriching the tactical network design of express service carriers with fleet scheduling characteristics

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    Express service carriers provide time-guaranteed deliveries of parcels via a network consisting of nodes and hubs. In this, nodes take care of the collection and delivery of parcels, and hubs have the function to consolidate parcels in between the nodes. The tactical network design problem assigns nodes to hubs, determines arcs between hubs, and routes parcels through the network. Afterwards, fleet scheduling creates a schedule for vehicles operated in the network. The strong relation between flow routing and fleet scheduling makes it difficult to optimise the network cost. Due to this complexity, fleet scheduling and network design are usually decoupled. We propose a new tactical network design model that is able to include fleet scheduling characteristics (like vehicle capacities, vehicle balancing, and drivers' legislations) in the network design. The model is tested on benchmark data based on instances from an express provider, resulting in significant cost reductions

    A satellite navigation system to improve the management of intermodal drayage

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    The intermodal transport chain can become more efficient by means of a good organization of the drayage movements. Drayage in intermodal container terminals involves the pick up or delivery of containers at customer locations, and the main objective is normally the assignment of transportation tasks to the different vehicles, often with the presence of time windows. The literature shows some works on centralised drayage management, but most of them consider the problem only from a static and deterministic perspective, whereas the work we present here incorporates the knowledge of the real-time position of the vehicles, which permanently enables the planner to reassign tasks in case the problem conditions change. This exact knowledge of position of the vehicles is possible thanks to a geographic positioning system by satellite (GPS, Galileo, Glonass), and the results show that this additional data can be used to dynamically improve the solution

    Scheduling and Routing of Truck Drivers Considering Regulations on Drivers’ Working Hours

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    In many countries, truck drivers are obliged by law to take a break or a rest regularly. In the European Union, for example, this is governed by Regulation (EC) No. 561/2006. It states that, after 4.5 hours of driving a truck, it is prohibited to continue driving until a 45-minute break is taken. After accumulating a driving time of 9 hours, a rest of 11 hours is mandatory. These are only two rules of a considerably longer list of break rules set out in this regulation, and it is only one of many regulations there are worldwide. Such breaks and rests have to be planned into the work schedules of the drivers. In general, the task of a dispatcher is to find routes and schedules for the truck drivers such that every customer is served in time. With the regulations on drivers’ working hours, both the routing and the scheduling parts of the task become more challenging. In this thesis, we study several optimization problems that arise in the context of drivers’ working hours. One is known as the truck driver scheduling problem. Here, a sequence of customers is given, and the task is to find a schedule for a driver such that every customer is visited within one of the customer’s time windows and the applicable break rules are complied with. Depending on the regarded break rules, we get different variants of the truck driver scheduling problem. Little is known about the complexity of the individual problem variants. One of the two focal points of this thesis is to present polynomial-time algorithms for different variants of the problem, for which polynomial-time algorithms are not yet known. With this, we can falsify the NP-hardness conjecture of Xu et al. (2003) for an important special case of their considered problem variant. But this thesis is not only about scheduling, it is also about routing. This constitutes the second focal point of this thesis. We present an integrated approach for the vehicle routing and truck driver scheduling problem. Here, a route refers to the order in which the customers are visited. However, the meaning of route is twofold. In another studied problem, the truck driver scheduling and routing problem, it means the sequence of road segments that the driver takes to drive from one customer to the other. In this problem, we take into account that, before taking a break, truck drivers need to head for a rest area or at least a spot where their vehicle can be parked. We even consider the time-dependent scenario in which driving times on road segments vary over the day due to rush hours. Both an exact approach and a heuristic for this problem are presented, and both are evaluated on a recent road network instance of Germany. It turns out that the heuristic is at least two orders of magnitude faster but still hardly worse than the exact approach. Our main motivation is the application in practice. It is our aim – and this is especially true for the second focal point – to provide helpful algorithms that may find their way into software products for dispatchers, like the described approach for the vehicle routing and truck driver scheduling problem is already integrated into the vehicle route planning tools of a commercial provider of logistics optimization software
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