A Wasp-Based Control Model for Real-time Routing of Parts in a Flexible Manufacturing System
Abstract
This article presents a self-adaptive, wasp-Based control model for real-time part routing in a flexible manufacturing system (FMS). Inspired from the natural system of a wasp colony, the proposed control model is a multi-agent system that exhibits adaptive behaviour. It uses simple rules built on a decentralized architecture and hence it overcomes the drawbacks of traditional agent-Based systems, such as long negotiation times among agents. the production problem, which has been previously studied in the literature, includes real-time routing of parts with the objective of minimizing average waiting times and average cycle times in a large FMS that consists of 40 machines. the proposed wasp-Based control model is benchmarked via simulation under various experimental conditions against those previously published studies. the simulation study shows that it outperforms the previously reported studies when the production system is heavily loaded and prone to congestion. the self-adaptive nature of the proposed model makes it robust in the presence of such dynamic, unexpected changes occurring in the FMS.
Recommended Citation
L. Meyyappan et al., "A Wasp-Based Control Model for Real-time Routing of Parts in a Flexible Manufacturing System," International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 259 - 268, Taylor and Francis Group; Taylor and Francis, Apr 2008.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1080/09511920701268874
Department(s)
Engineering Management and Systems Engineering
Keywords and Phrases
Agent-based systems; Distributed manufacturing control; Distributed multi-agent systems; Flexible manufacturing system (FMS); FMS control; FMS performance evaluation
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
1362-3052; 0951-192X
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2024 Taylor and Francis Group; Taylor and Francis, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Apr 2008