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General Paper

Investigating the use of metaheuristics for solving single vehicle routing problems with time-varying traversal costs

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Pages 34-47 | Received 01 Feb 2011, Accepted 01 Jan 2012, Published online: 21 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Metaheuristic algorithms, such as simulated annealing and tabu search, are popular solution techniques for vehicle routing problems (VRPs). These approaches rely on iterative improvements to a starting solution, involving slight alterations to the routes (ie, neighbourhood moves), moving a node to a different part of a solution, swapping nodes or inverting sections of a tour, for example. When working with standard VRPs, where the costs of the arcs do not vary with advancing time, evaluating changes to the total cost following a neighbourhood move is a simple process: simply subtract the cost of the links removed from the solution and add the costs for the new links. When a time-varying aspect (eg, congestion) is included in the costs, these calculations become estimations rather than exact values. This paper focuses on a single vehicle routing problem, similar to the Travelling Salesman Problem, and investigates the potential for using estimation methods on simple models with time-variant costs, mimicking the effects of road congestion.

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