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CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SIX. Computational Facility Layout. The Facility Layout Problem. Given the activity relationship as well as the space of the department, how to construct plan the layout of the facility The basis of the layout planning is the closeness ratings or material flow intensities

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CHAPTER SIX

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  1. CHAPTER SIX Computational Facility Layout

  2. The Facility Layout Problem • Given the activity relationship as well as the space of the department, how to construct plan the layout of the facility • The basis of the layout planning is the closeness ratings or material flow intensities • minimize the flow times distance • Maximize the closeness (adjacency) • For most practical real world instances, the computational complexity has results in various heuristics • What is heuristic? • Construction Heuristic • Improvement Heuristic

  3. Heuristic and Optimality • Consider the knapsack problem • Z = max 5 x1 + 7 x2 + 11 x3 + 12 x4 + 17 x5 • Subject to 2 x1 + 3 x2 + 4 x3 + 5 x4 + 7 x5 <= 10 • Heuristic: An intuitive problem solving method/procedure • Constructive • Heuristic 1, Pick sequentially the ones with the best benefit • Heuristic 2, Pick sequentially the ones with the best benefit per unit • Greedy Improvement: • Exchange two items in a solution • Meta-Heuristic: Simulated Annealing, Genetic Algorithm • Optimal Solution • Mathematical Programming and Optimization • Linear Programming, Integer Programming, Nonlinear Programming

  4. A Simple Facility Layout Problem Suppose we have 10 identical sized departments and the flow intensity between these 10 department is fij Find the best arrangement of the 10 department along an aisle so that the total travel (flow intensity times distance) is minimized A Quadratic Assignment Model is necessary to Optimally solve the problem

  5. A Quadratic Assignment Model • Decision Variables • X(i,j) -- 1: Department I will be located at position j • 0: Otherwise • Constraints • Each one position can hold exactly one department • SUM( i in 1…10) x(i,j) = 1 • Each department has to be assigned exactly one position • SUM( j in 1…10) x(i,j) = 1 • Objective • SUM(I, j, m, n, all in 1..10 ) x(i,j)* x(m,n)*f(i,m)*d(j,n) • This is an integer quadratic assignment problem.

  6. Pair-Wise Exchange Heuristic • Phase I: Construct Phase Initial Solution (1,2,3,4) • Phase II: Improvement – Pair Wise Exchange • a) Exchange two departments • b) If results in better solution, accept; go to a) • otherwise stop

  7. Pair Wise Exchange Heuristic

  8. Pair Wise Exchange Heuristic

  9. Pair Wise Exchange Heuristic

  10. Pair Wise Exchange Heuristic

  11. Pair-Wise Exchange Heuristic • Limitations • No guarantee of optimality, • The final solution depends on the initial layout • Leads to suboptimal solution • Does not consider size and shape of departments • Additional work has to be re-arrange the department if shaper are not equal

  12. Graph Based Method • Graph based method dates back to the later 1960s and early 1970s. • The method starts with an adjacency relationship chart • Then, we assign weight to the adjacency relationships between departments • A graph, called adjacency graph is constructed • Node: to represent department • Arc : to represent adjacency, weight on arc represents the adjacency score • Goal: To find a graph with maximum sum of arc weights • However, not all the adjacency relations can be implemented in such a graph, that is the graph may not be planar.

  13. A Planar Graph Planar graph: A graph is a planar if it can be drawn so that each edge intersects no other edges and passes through no other vertices Intuitively, a planar graph is a graph where there is no intersection of arcs (flow of material) To find a maximum weight planar graph

  14. Procedure to Find Maximum Weight Adjacent Planar Graph • Step 1: Select a department pair with largest weight • Step 2: Select a third department based on the sum of the weights with the two departments selected. • Step 3: Select next unselected department to enter by evaluating the sum of weights and place the department on the face of the graph. • Here, a face of a graph is a bounded region of a graph • Step 4: Continuing the Step 3 until all departments are selected • Step 5: Construct a block layout from the planar graph

  15. From Graph to Block Design • Let us “blow” air into each node in the planar graph • Nodes explode • Interior faces becomes a dot • The edge in primal graph becomes the boundary between departments • Dual Graph • Nodes in dual  faces in primal • Edge in dual : if two faces connects in the primal graph • The faces in dual represents the department • Draw Block Design

  16. Limitation of Graph Based Method • Limitations • The adjacency score does not account for distance, nor does it account for distance other than adjacent department • Although size is considered in this method, the specific dimension is not, the length between adjacent departments are also not considered. • We are attempting to construct graphs, called planar graphs, whose arcs do not intersect. • The final layout is very sensitive to the assignment of weights in the relationship chart.

  17. Graph-based Method

  18. Graph-based Method

  19. Graph-based Method

  20. Graph-based Method

  21. Graph-based Method

  22. Graph-based Method

  23. Computer Relative Allocation of Facility Techniques (CRAFT) • Discrete or Continuous Representation • Discrete Representation • A two-dimension array with numbers • Each cell represents a unit area & numbers represent the department occupied the cell

  24. A Sample Problem

  25. Valid Discrete Representation • Valid Representation • Contiguous: If an activity is represented by more than one unit, every unit of the must share at least one edge with at least one other unit • Connectedness: The perimeter of an activity must be a single closed loop • No Enclosed Void: No activity shape shall contain an enclosed void

  26. Computer Relative Allocation of Facility Techniques -- CRAFT (1963) • Algorithm • 1) Any Incumbent Layout • Describe a tentative layout in blocks • Determine centroids of each department • Cost= S distance (in the from-to matrix) X unit cost • Distance can be Euclidian or Rectilinear • 2) Improvement: make pair wise or three way exchanges • equal area only • adjacent (generally) • 3) If better solution exists; Choose the best, go to 1) • Otherwise Stop

  27. CRAFT

  28. CRAFT

  29. CRAFT

  30. CRAFT

  31. CRAFT

  32. CRAFT • In the original design, exchange has to be departments of equal area or adjacent departments.

  33. Shape Consideration • Shape Consideration • Shaper Ratio Rule: The ratio of a feasible shape should be with specified limits • Corner Counter: The number of corners for a feasible shaper may not exceed specified maximum

  34. Excel Add-ins for facility Planning • The Excel Add-In • Written by Prof. Paul Jensen (UT-Austin) • Contains an implementation of CRAFT and can be downloaded at • http://www.me.utexas.edu/~jensen/ORMM/frontpage/jensen.lib/index_omie.html#ormm • Sequence • Create a Plant • Define the Facility • Optimum Sequence • Craft Method • Fixed Point • Optimize

  35. Mixed Integer Program • The work begins latterly in the 1990s by Montreuil • The departments are assumed to be rectangular within a rectangular plant. • Plant • Length Bx, Width By • Shape consideration: • Area, • The (minimum, maximum) width of a department • The (minimum, maximum) length of a department • Decisions: Where to put the Departments (Centroid) and the shape (length,width) of the department • Objective = flow_intensity* cost *distance

  36. MIP(Mixed Integer Program) • Parameters

  37. MIP(Mixed Integer Program ) • Decision variables

  38. MIP model setup

  39. MIP model setup II • Constraint (6.13) ensures the upper corner of j is less than the lower corner of i if z_ij(x) =1 . i.e., to the east of i. Note if z_ij(x) = 0, (6.13) is redundant. • Constraint (6.14) ensures to the north-south relationship • Constraint (6.15) ensures that no two departments overlap by forcing a separation at least in the east-west or north-south direction.

  40. MIP Models • Benefit of MIP Model • Department shapes as well as their area can be modeled through individually specified lower and upper limits !!! • It might be able to control length-width ratio as well • (xi’’ – xi’ ) <= R (yi’’-yi’) or • (yi’’ – yi’ ) <= R (xi’’-xi’) • Heuristically, we can combine CRAFT with MIP. • Get a initial layout using CRAFT, use MIP to find the best rectangular layout design • Solving the problem exactly (optimal solution) is hard • 8~10 are the typical size solvable in a reasonable amount of time

  41. Commercial Facility Layout Packages • In the Instructor’s Opinion, there is no commercial package that will suit all the needs, partly due to the difficult of the problem, but more due to the fact that Facility Layout is a combination of Science and Art. • There has been a trend to combine optimization techniques with interactive graphic procedures, especially people have an unique pattern reorganization capability than computers. • We encourage the reader to use the web to keep abreast of new developments, resort to professional publications, which periodically publish survey of software packages for facilities planning, and new techniques

  42. References • Literature – Presentation topics • General Survey • Meller, R.D. and K. Gau, “The Facility Layout Problem: Recent and Emerging Trends and Perspective,” Journal of Manufacturing Systems, 15:5, 351-366,1996 • Kusiak, A. and S. S. Heragu, “The Facility Layout Problem,” European Journal of Operational Research, v29, 229-251, 1987 • Mixed Integer Programming • Montreuil, B., “A Modeling Framework for Integrating Layout Design and Flow Network Design,” Proceedings of the Material Handling Research Colloquium, Hebron, KY, 1990 • Assignment Problem and the Location of Economic Activities, Econometrica,

  43. Reference • Reference (Continue) • Graph Based Approach • Hassan, M. M. D and G. L. Hogg, “On Constructing a Block Layout by Graph Theory,” International Journal of production Research, 29:6, 1263-1278, 1991 • Irvine, S. A. and I. R. Melchert, “A New Approach to the Block Layout Problem,” International Journal of Production Research, 35:8, 2359-2376, 1997 • Computerized Layout Design • Bozer, Y.A., R.D. Meller and S.J. Erlebacher, “An Improvement Type Layout Algorithm for Single and Multiple Floor Facilities,” Management Science, 40:7, 451-467 1994 • Tate, D.M. and A. E. Smith, “Unequal Area Facility Layout Using Genetic Search,” IIE Transactions, 27:4, 465-472, 1995 • Your Contribution In The Future !!

  44. Assignments • Using Excel Add-ins as well as graph based method to solve the following problems • 6.8, 6.9, 6.10, 6.11 6.14, 6.15, 6.19, 6.20 • Compare the results and see if they make sense or not. • Work in group, select one of the papers and present it in class at the end of the quarter.

  45. Thanks

  46. BLOCPLAN Set up all departments in bands (2or3) Continuous areas not blocks Use From to or a relationship chart Uses two way exchanges

  47. BLOCPLAN

  48. BLOCPLAN

  49. BLOCPLAN

  50. MIP(Mixed Integer Program) • Generally a construction type model • Requires some knowledge of linear and integer programming • Solutions to these types of problems are difficult • We will examine the general formulation

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