Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
975023 Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We propose a model of assembly production systems.•Parts are represented by particles transported on a tree network.•We investigate the response of production flow against demand and supply fluctuations.•The stock level in each segment of the systems highly depends on the fluctuations and buffer size.•We summarize key factors to improve assembly production rate.

Despite recent developments in management theory, maintaining a manufacturing schedule remains difficult because of production delays and fluctuations in demand and supply of materials. The response of manufacturing systems to such disruptions to dynamic behavior has been rarely studied. To capture these responses, we investigate a process that models the assembly of parts into end products. The complete assembly process is represented by a directed tree, where the smallest parts are injected at leaves and the end products are removed at the root. A discrete assembly process, represented by a node on the network, integrates parts, which are then sent to the next downstream node as a single part. The model exhibits some intriguing phenomena, including overstock cascade, phase transition in terms of demand and supply fluctuations, nonmonotonic distribution of stockout in the network, and the formation of a stockout path and stockout chains. Surprisingly, these rich phenomena result from only the nature of distributed assembly processes. From a physical perspective, these phenomena provide insight into delay dynamics and inventory distributions in large-scale manufacturing systems.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Mathematical Physics
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