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A hybrid flowshop scheduling model considering dedicated machines and lot-splitting for the solar cell industry

Author

Listed:
  • Li-Chih Wang
  • Yin-Yann Chen
  • Tzu-Li Chen
  • Chen-Yang Cheng
  • Chin-Wei Chang

Abstract

This paper studies a solar cell industry scheduling problem, which is similar to traditional hybrid flowshop scheduling (HFS). In a typical HFS problem, the allocation of machine resources for each order should be scheduled in advance. However, the challenge in solar cell manufacturing is the number of machines that can be adjusted dynamically to complete the job. An optimal production scheduling model is developed to explore these issues, considering the practical characteristics, such as hybrid flowshop, parallel machine system, dedicated machines, sequence independent job setup times and sequence dependent job setup times. The objective of this model is to minimise the makespan and to decide the processing sequence of the orders/lots in each stage, lot-splitting decisions for the orders and the number of machines used to satisfy the demands in each stage. From the experimental results, lot-splitting has significant effect on shortening the makespan, and the improvement effect is influenced by the processing time and the setup time of orders. Therefore, the threshold point to improve the makespan can be identified. In addition, the model also indicates that more lot-splitting approaches, that is, the flexibility of allocating orders/lots to machines is larger, will result in a better scheduling performance.

Suggested Citation

  • Li-Chih Wang & Yin-Yann Chen & Tzu-Li Chen & Chen-Yang Cheng & Chin-Wei Chang, 2014. "A hybrid flowshop scheduling model considering dedicated machines and lot-splitting for the solar cell industry," International Journal of Systems Science, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 45(10), pages 2055-2071, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:tsysxx:v:45:y:2014:i:10:p:2055-2071
    DOI: 10.1080/00207721.2012.762557
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