An Optimization Approach to Airline Integrated Recovery

An Optimization Approach to Airline Integrated Recovery

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Article ID: iaor20127712
Volume: 46
Issue: 4
Start Page Number: 482
End Page Number: 500
Publication Date: Nov 2012
Journal: Transportation Science
Authors: , , , ,
Keywords: vehicle routing & scheduling
Abstract:

Although the airline industry has benefited from advancements made in computational and operational research methods, most implementations arise from the frictionless environment of the planning stage. Because 22% of all flights have been delayed and 3% have been cancelled in the United States since 2001, schedule perturbations are inevitable. The complexity of the operational environment is exacerbated by the need for obtaining a solution in as close to real‐time as possible. Given some time horizon, the recovery process seeks to repair the flight schedule, aircraft rotations, crew schedule, and passenger itineraries in a tractable manner. Each component individually can be difficult to solve, so early research on irregular operations has studied these problems in isolation, leading to a sequential process by which the recovery process is conducted. Recent work has integrated a subset of these four components, usually abstracting from crew recovery. We present an optimization‐based approach to solve the fully integrated airline recovery problem. After our solution methodology is presented, it is tested using data from an actual U.S. carrier with a dense hub‐and‐spoke network using a single‐day horizon. It is shown that in several instances an integrated solution is delivered in a reasonable runtime. Moreover, we show the integrated approach can substantially improve the solution quality over the incumbent sequential approach. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to present computational results on the fully integrated problem.

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