4.5 Article

Airline operational crew-aircraft planning considering revenue management: A robust optimization model under disruption

Publisher

GROWING SCIENCE
DOI: 10.5267/j.ijiec.2022.12.003

Keywords

Airline Revenue Management; Crew Scheduling; Aircraft Maintenance Routing; Airline Disruption; Efficient Metaheuristic; Adaptive Large Neighborhood; Searching; Adaptive Robust Scenario-based; Optimization

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This study aims to optimize crew scheduling decisions considering the operational constraints related to aircraft maintenance routing regulations. It proposes a Revenue Management approach to solve the integrated crew scheduling and aircraft maintenance routing problem under disruption scenarios. The results show that applying this approach can help airlines minimize delay/cancellation costs and increase profit by recapturing spilled demand.
Airline planning involves various issues that, in a general, can be grouped as network planning, schedule design and fleet planning, aircraft planning, and crew scheduling decisions. This study mainly aims to optimize the Crew Scheduling (CS) decisions considering the operational constraints related to Aircraft Maintenance Routing (AMR) regulations. Since, after fuel, crew costs are vital for airlines, and aircraft maintenance constraints are important operationally, the integrated Crew Scheduling and Aircraft Maintenance Routing (CS-AMR) problem is an important issue for the airlines. The present research addresses this problem using the Revenue Management (RM) approach under some disruption scenarios in the initial schedule. The proposed approach enables airlines to make more efficient decisions during disruptions to prevent flight delay/cancellation costs and recaptures an acceptable part of the spilled demand caused by disruption through the fleet stand-by capacity. This approach considers a set of disruptions in the flight schedule under different probable scenarios and provides the optimal decisions. Accordingly, airlines have two decision-making stages: Here-and-Now (HN) decisions related to the initial schedule for crew, aircraft routing and stand-by capacity to face probable disruptions and Wait-and-See (WS) decisions that determine what the executive plan of each crew and aircraft should be under each scenario, and how to use different options for flight cancellation and substitution. To this end, a novel Two-Stage Robust Scenario-based Optimization (TSRSO) model is proposed that considers the HN and WS decisions simultaneously. A numerical example is solved, and its results verify the applicability and evaluate the performance of the proposed TSRSO model. Regarding the complexity of the proposed MILP model categorized as NP-hard problems, we develop a computationally efficient solution method to solve large-scale problem instances. A single-agent local search metaheuristic algorithm, Adaptive Large Neighborhood Search (ALNS), is applied to solve the CS-AMR problem efficiently. According to the result obtained by applying the proposed revenue management approach for the CS-AMR problem, airlines can drive a robust solution under disruption scenarios that not only minimizes the total delay/cancellation costs but also increases the profit by recapturing the spilled demand. (c) 2023 by the authors; licensee Growing Science, Canada

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