454 research outputs found

    Genetic Algorithm for Solving the Integrated Production-Distribution-Direct Transportation Planning

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    This paper proposes a model of integrated production, distribution and transportation planning for 4-echelon supply chain system that consists of a manufacturer using a continuous production process, a distribution center, distributors and retailers. By means of time-dependent demand at all retailers and direct transportation from one echelon to its successive echelons, the purpose of this paper is to determine production/replenishment and transportation policies at manufacturer, distribution center, distributors and retailers in order to minimize annually total system cost. Due to the proposed model is classified as a mixed integer non-linear programming so it is almost impossible to solve the model using the exact optimization methods and a lot of time is needed when the enumeration methods is applied to solve only a small scale problem. In this paper, we apply the genetic algorithm for solving the model. Using integer encoding for constructing the chromosome, the best solution is going to be searched. Compared with enumeration method, the difference of the result is only 0.0594% with the consumption time is only 0.5609% time that enumeration methods need

    An application of an ethernet based protocol for communication and control in automated manufacturing

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    The exchange of information in the industrial environment is essential in order to achieve complete integration and control of manufacturing processes. At present the majority of devices present in the shop floor environment are still used as stand alone machines. They do not take advantage of the possibilities offered by a communication link to improve the manufacturing process. The subject of this research has been centered on the development of a simple, flexible and inexpensive support system for communication and control of manufacturing processes. As a result, a system with these features has been proposed and implemented on a simulated workcell. The area footwear manufacturing was chosen for modelling the workcell. The components of the manufacturing support system were developed using an object oriented approach which allowed modularity and software reuse. In order to achieve communication between the components, a communication protocol was developed following the process defined in the rapid protocol implementation framework. Ethernet was selected for implementing the lower levels of the protocol. Java, a new object oriented programming language used for the implementation of the system, showed that it could became a promising language for the implementation of manufacturing applications. In particular the platform independence feature of the language allows the immediate porting of applications to systems with different features. The manufacturing cell simulation had shown that the times associated with the manufacturing support system operations are compatible for its use in applications where the response times are in the order of one second

    Energy Harvesting Networked Nodes: Measurements, Algorithms, and Prototyping

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    Recent advances in ultra-low-power wireless communications and in energy harvesting will soon enable energetically self-sustainable wireless devices. Networks of such devices will serve as building blocks for different Internet of Things (IoT) applications, such as searching for an object on a network of objects and continuous monitoring of object configurations. Yet, numerous challenges need to be addressed for the IoT vision to be fully realized. This thesis considers several challenges related to ultra-low-power energy harvesting networked nodes: energy source characterization, algorithm design, and node design and prototyping. Additionally, the thesis contributes to engineering education, specifically to project-based learning. We summarize our contributions to light and kinetic (motion) energy characterization for energy harvesting nodes. To characterize light energy, we conducted a first-of-its kind 16 month-long indoor light energy measurements campaign. To characterize energy of motion, we collected over 200 hours of human and object motion traces. We also analyzed traces previously collected in a study with over 40 participants. We summarize our insights, including light and motion energy budgets, variability, and influencing factors. These insights are useful for designing energy harvesting nodes and energy harvesting adaptive algorithms. We shared with the community our light energy traces, which can be used as energy inputs to system and algorithm simulators and emulators. We also discuss resource allocation problems we considered for energy harvesting nodes. Inspired by the needs of tracking and monitoring IoT applications, we formulated and studied resource allocation problems aimed at allocating the nodes' time-varying resources in a uniform way with respect to time. We mainly considered deterministic energy profile and stochastic environmental energy models, and focused on single node and link scenarios. We formulated optimization problems using utility maximization and lexicographic maximization frameworks, and introduced algorithms for solving the formulated problems. For several settings, we provided low-complexity solution algorithms. We also examined many simple policies. We demonstrated, analytically and via simulations, that in many settings simple policies perform well. We also summarize our design and prototyping efforts for a new class of ultra-low-power nodes - Energy Harvesting Active Networked Tags (EnHANTs). Future EnHANTs will be wireless nodes that can be attached to commonplace objects (books, furniture, clothing). We describe the EnHANTs prototypes and the EnHANTs testbed that we developed, in collaboration with other research groups, over the last 4 years in 6 integration phases. The prototypes harvest energy of the indoor light, communicate with each other via ultra-low-power transceivers, form small multihop networks, and adapt their communications and networking to their energy harvesting states. The EnHANTs testbed can expose the prototypes to light conditions based on real-world light energy traces. Using the testbed and our light energy traces, we evaluated some of our energy harvesting adaptive policies. Our insights into node design and performance evaluations may apply beyond EnHANTs to networks of various energy harvesting nodes. Finally, we present our contributions to engineering education. Over the last 4 years, we engaged high school, undergraduate, and M.S. students in more than 100 research projects within the EnHANTs project. We summarize our approaches to facilitating student learning, and discuss the results of evaluation surveys that demonstrate the effectiveness of our approaches

    Design and Management of Manufacturing Systems

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    Although the design and management of manufacturing systems have been explored in the literature for many years now, they still remain topical problems in the current scientific research. The changing market trends, globalization, the constant pressure to reduce production costs, and technical and technological progress make it necessary to search for new manufacturing methods and ways of organizing them, and to modify manufacturing system design paradigms. This book presents current research in different areas connected with the design and management of manufacturing systems and covers such subject areas as: methods supporting the design of manufacturing systems, methods of improving maintenance processes in companies, the design and improvement of manufacturing processes, the control of production processes in modern manufacturing systems production methods and techniques used in modern manufacturing systems and environmental aspects of production and their impact on the design and management of manufacturing systems. The wide range of research findings reported in this book confirms that the design of manufacturing systems is a complex problem and that the achievement of goals set for modern manufacturing systems requires interdisciplinary knowledge and the simultaneous design of the product, process and system, as well as the knowledge of modern manufacturing and organizational methods and techniques

    Technological roadmap on AI planning and scheduling

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    At the beginning of the new century, Information Technologies had become basic and indispensable constituents of the production and preparation processes for all kinds of goods and services and with that are largely influencing both the working and private life of nearly every citizen. This development will continue and even further grow with the continually increasing use of the Internet in production, business, science, education, and everyday societal and private undertaking. Recent years have shown, however, that a dramatic enhancement of software capabilities is required, when aiming to continuously provide advanced and competitive products and services in all these fast developing sectors. It includes the development of intelligent systems – systems that are more autonomous, flexible, and robust than today’s conventional software. Intelligent Planning and Scheduling is a key enabling technology for intelligent systems. It has been developed and matured over the last three decades and has successfully been employed for a variety of applications in commerce, industry, education, medicine, public transport, defense, and government. This document reviews the state-of-the-art in key application and technical areas of Intelligent Planning and Scheduling. It identifies the most important research, development, and technology transfer efforts required in the coming 3 to 10 years and shows the way forward to meet these challenges in the short-, medium- and longer-term future. The roadmap has been developed under the regime of PLANET – the European Network of Excellence in AI Planning. This network, established by the European Commission in 1998, is the co-ordinating framework for research, development, and technology transfer in the field of Intelligent Planning and Scheduling in Europe. A large number of people have contributed to this document including the members of PLANET non- European international experts, and a number of independent expert peer reviewers. All of them are acknowledged in a separate section of this document. Intelligent Planning and Scheduling is a far-reaching technology. Accepting the challenges and progressing along the directions pointed out in this roadmap will enable a new generation of intelligent application systems in a wide variety of industrial, commercial, public, and private sectors
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