4.6 Article

Energy-efficient approach to minimizing the energy consumption in an extended job-shop scheduling problem

Journal

CHINESE JOURNAL OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 1048-1055

Publisher

SPRINGEROPEN
DOI: 10.3901/CJME.2015.0617.082

Keywords

energy consumption; makespan; production planning and scheduling; job-shop floor; different cutting speeds

Funding

  1. Marie Curie International Research Staff Exchange Scheme Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Program [294931]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [51175262]
  3. Jiangsu Provincial Science Foundation for Excellent Youths of China [BK2012032]
  4. Jiangsu Provincial Industry-Academy-Research Grant of China [BY201220116]

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The traditional production planning and scheduling problems consider performance indicators like time, cost and quality as optimization objectives in manufacturing processes. However, environmentally-friendly factors like energy consumption of production have not been completely taken into consideration. Against this background, this paper addresses an approach to modify a given schedule generated by a production planning and scheduling system in a job shop floor, where machine tools can work at different cutting speeds. It can adjust the cutting speeds of the operations while keeping the original assignment and processing sequence of operations of each job fixed in order to obtain energy savings. First, the proposed approach, based on a mixed integer programming mathematical model, changes the total idle time of the given schedule to minimize energy consumption in the job shop floor while accepting the optimal solution of the scheduling objective, makespan. Then, a genetic-simulated annealing algorithm is used to explore the optimal solution due to the fact that the problem is strongly NP-hard. Finally, the effectiveness of the approach is performed smalland large-size instances, respectively. The experimental results show that the approach can save 5%-10% of the average energy consumption while accepting the optimal solution of the makespan in small-size instances. In addition, the average maximum energy saving ratio can reach to 13%. And it can save approximately 1%-4% of the average energy consumption and approximately 2.4% of the average maximum energy while accepting the near-optimal solution of the makespan in large-size instances. The proposed research provides an interesting point to explore an energy-aware schedule optimization for a traditional production planning and scheduling problem.

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