Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1705219 | Applied Mathematical Modelling | 2011 | 7 Pages |
In many realistic scheduling settings a job processed later consumes more time than the same job processed earlier – this is known as scheduling with deteriorating jobs. Most research on scheduling with deteriorating jobs assumes that the actual processing time of a job is an increasing function of its starting time. Thus a job processed late may incur an excessively long processing time. On the other hand, setup times occur in manufacturing situations where jobs are processed in batches whereby each batch incurs a setup time. This paper considers scheduling with deteriorating jobs in which the actual processing time of a job is a function of the logarithm of the total processing time of the jobs processed before it (to avoid the unrealistic situation where the jobs scheduled late will incur excessively long processing times) and the setup times are proportional to the actual processing times of the already scheduled jobs. Under the proposed model, we provide optimal solutions for some single-machine problems.