4.7 Article

A genetic algorithm embedded with a concise chromosome representation for distributed and flexible job-shop scheduling problems

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT MANUFACTURING
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 19-34

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10845-015-1083-z

Keywords

Genetic algorithm; Distributed flexible job-shop; Chromosome representation; Chromosome space; Solution space; Shadow chromosomes

Funding

  1. National Science Council (Taiwan) [NSC-100-2221-E-009-059-MY3]

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This paper proposes a genetic algorithm for solving distributed and flexible job-shop scheduling (DFJS) problems. A DFJS problem involves three scheduling decisions: (1) job-to-cell assignment, (2) operation-sequencing, and (3) operation-to-machine assignment. Therefore, solving a DFJS problem is essentially a 3-dimensional solution space search problem; each dimension represents a type of decision. The algorithm is developed by proposing a new and concise chromosome representation , which models a 3-dimensional scheduling solution by a 1-dimensional scheme (i.e., a sequence of all jobs to be scheduled). That is, the chromosome space is 1-dimensional (1D) and the solution space is 3-dimensional (3D). In , we develop a 1D-to-3D decoding method to convert a 1D chromosome into a 3D solution. In addition, given a 3D solution, we use a refinement method to improve the scheduling performance and subsequently use a 3D-to-1D encoding method to convert the refined 3D solution into a 1D chromosome. The 1D-to-3D decoding method is designed to obtain a good 3D solution which tends to be load-balanced. In contrast, the refinement and 3D-to-1D encoding methods of a 3D solution provides a novel way (rather than by genetic operators) to generate new chromosomes, which are herein called shadow chromosomes. Numerical experiments indicate that outperforms the IGA developed by De Giovanni and Pezzella (Eur J Oper Res 200:395-408, 2010), which is the up-to-date best-performing genetic algorithm in solving DFJS problems.

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