Kaveh Azadeh, Debjit Roy, René de Koster, Seyyed Mahdi Ghorashi Khalilabadi
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We study the effect of no zoning (NZ) and progressive zoning strategies on throughput capacity for balanced zone configurations with both fixed and dynamic order profiles. We first develop queuing network models to estimate pick throughput capacity that correspond to a given number of AMRs and picking with a fixed number of zones. We demonstrate that the throughput capacity is dependent on the chosen zoning strategy. However, the magnitude of the gains achieved is influenced by the size of the orders being processed. We also show that using a dynamic switching strategy has little effect on throughput performance. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
过去十年间,一些零售商开始将传统的门店配送与全渠道仓库向消费者提供在线销售服务结合起来,而全渠道仓库的自动化程度也在不断提高。一种流行的方法是使用自动移动机器人(AMR)与人类拣货员合作。在这种方法中,分区存储系统可以进一步减少拣货员的非生产性步行时间,拣货员留在自己的分区外围,而机器人则在分区之间运送订单周转箱。然而,机器人系统的最佳分区策略并不明确:分区少特别适合大型商店订单,而分区多则特别适合小型在线订单。我们研究了无分区(NZ)和渐进分区策略对具有固定和动态订单配置的平衡分区吞吐能力的影响。我们首先建立了排队网络模型,以估算与给定数量的 AMR 和固定数量分区拣货相对应的拣货吞吐能力。我们证明,吞吐能力取决于所选择的分区策略。然而,所取得的收益大小受正在处理的订单规模的影响。我们还表明,使用动态切换策略对吞吐量性能影响甚微。与此相反,受益于订单曲线变化的固定切换策略有可能将吞吐量性能比 NZ 策略提高 17%,尽管需要付出更高的机器人成本。
Zoning strategies for human–robot collaborative picking
During the last decade, several retailers have started to combine traditional store deliveries with the fulfillment of online sales to consumers from omni-channel warehouses, which are increasingly being automated. A popular option is to use autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) in collaboration with human pickers. In this approach, the pickers' unproductive walking time can be reduced even further by zoning the storage system, where the pickers stay within their zone periphery and robots transport order totes between the zones. However, the robotic systems' optimal zoning strategy is unclear: few zones are particularly good for large store orders, while many zones are particularly good for small online orders. We study the effect of no zoning (NZ) and progressive zoning strategies on throughput capacity for balanced zone configurations with both fixed and dynamic order profiles. We first develop queuing network models to estimate pick throughput capacity that correspond to a given number of AMRs and picking with a fixed number of zones. We demonstrate that the throughput capacity is dependent on the chosen zoning strategy. However, the magnitude of the gains achieved is influenced by the size of the orders being processed. We also show that using a dynamic switching strategy has little effect on throughput performance. In contrast, a fixed switching strategy benefiting from changes in the order profile has the potential to increase throughput performance by 17% compared to the NZ strategy, albeit at a higher robot cost.
期刊介绍:
Decision Sciences, a premier journal of the Decision Sciences Institute, publishes scholarly research about decision making within the boundaries of an organization, as well as decisions involving inter-firm coordination. The journal promotes research advancing decision making at the interfaces of business functions and organizational boundaries. The journal also seeks articles extending established lines of work assuming the results of the research have the potential to substantially impact either decision making theory or industry practice. Ground-breaking research articles that enhance managerial understanding of decision making processes and stimulate further research in multi-disciplinary domains are particularly encouraged.