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Original Articles

Sequencing and batching procedures for minimizing earliness and tardiness penalty of order retrievals

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Pages 727-738 | Received 01 May 1992, Published online: 26 Apr 2007
 

Abstract

Order retrieval is considered one of the most costly activities in automated warehouses. A recent survey, Warehousing Education and Research Council's 1986 Survey, identified order picking as the highest priority warehousing activity for productivity improvement. The recent implementations of the widely used just-in-time (JIT) approach to production control, which requires accurate order retrievals such that production delays and inventory accumulation between production stages are minimized, have further emphasized the importance of the order sequencing and batching problems. In this research, we investigate the multiple address automated storage/retrieval systems (AS/RS) when orders are assigned due dates. Orders to be retrieved arrive at the AS/R system and each order is defined by a set of products (parts) type, the corresponding quantities to be retrieved and a due date. Orders can be retrieved (processed) individually or grouped in batches and every batch is retrieved in one tour (trip) of the automated storage/retrieval machine. The grouping of orders into batches (batching process) is performed based on a penalty function which incorporates both the earliness and the tardiness of the orders. The objective is to sequence and group the orders into batches such that the penalty function is minimized. We develop efficient procedures for order sequencing and batching such that just-in-time order retrieval can be achieved.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

M.-K. LEE

On leave at Rutgers University from the Department of Industrial Engineering, Keimyung University, Korea.

E. SCHERER

On leave at Rutgers University from the Department of Mechanical Engineering, Aachen University of Technology, Germany.

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