Article ID: | iaor200856 |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Volume: | 34 |
Issue: | 6 |
Start Page Number: | 585 |
End Page Number: | 598 |
Publication Date: | Dec 2006 |
Journal: | OMEGA |
Authors: | Towill Denis R., Naim Mohamed M., Zhou Li, Tang Ou |
Keywords: | control, manufacturing industries, simulation: applications |
In this paper we study a hybrid system with both manufacturing and remanufacturing. The inventory control strategy we use in the manufacturing loop is an automatic pipeline, inventory and order based production control system. In the remanufacturing loop we employ a Kanban policy to represent a typical pull system. The methodology adopted uses control theory and simulation. The aim of the research is to analyse the dynamic (as distinct from the static) performance of the specified hybrid system. Dynamics have implications on total costs in terms of inventory holding, capacity utilisation and customer service failures. We analyse the parameter settings to find preferred ‘nominal’, ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ values in terms of system dynamics performance criteria such as rise time, settling time and overshoot. Based on these parameter settings, we investigate the robustness of the system to changes in return yield and the manufacturing/remanufacturing lead time. Our results clearly show that the system is robust with respect to the system dynamics performance and the remanufacturing process can help to improve system dynamics performance. Thus, the perceived benefits of remanufacturing of products, both environmentally and economically, as quoted in the literature are found not to be detrimental to system dynamics performance when a Kanban policy is used to control the remanufacturing process.