Affiliation:
1. University ‘Federico II’ of Naples Department of Design and Industrial Engineering Naples, Italy
Abstract
In the last few years, firms’ efforts have been directed towards improvement in the manufacturing cycle, lead times reduction and quality assurance, due to the ever-increasing time-to-market and quality requirements. In this context to achieve better results in terms of shop floor scheduling and lead time reduction, many scheduling approaches have been developed, but most of these fall short of achieving good results because they do not identify clearly where and how much inventory should be employed (e.g. Davis proposed a heuristic for determining work in process inventories in a flow line). This paper deals with problems of work-in-progress (WIP) inventory management, describing an approach based on the combinatorial problem related to WIP size and location on the shop floor, which is a function of buffer sizes in each operation of the production process. The proposed model has been tested in an aeronautical firm where a relevant growth in the output rate level has been achieved using four WIP buffers with a total inventory of 50 batches.
Subject
Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Mechanical Engineering
Reference30 articles.
1. Goldratt E. The unbalanced plant. In Proceedings of the International Conference of the American Production and Inventory Control Society, 1981, pp. 195–199.
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