• DocumentCode
    1267171
  • Title

    A Production-Inventory System With Both Patient and Impatient Demand Classes

  • Author

    Benjaafar, Saif ; Elhafsi, Mohsen

  • Author_Institution
    Program in Ind. & Syst. Eng., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
  • Volume
    9
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2012
  • Firstpage
    148
  • Lastpage
    159
  • Abstract
    We consider a production-inventory system with two customer classes, one patient and one impatient. Orders from the patient class can be backordered if needed, while orders from the impatient class must be rejected if they cannot be fulfilled from on-hand inventory. Orders backordered incur a backorder cost, while orders rejected incur a lost sales cost. The objective is to minimize the sum of inventory holding cost and the costs of backorders and lost sales. We formulate the problem as a Markov decision process and use this formulation to characterize the structure of the optimal policy. We show that the optimal policy can be described by two threshold functions that depend on the level of backorders from the patient class. These threshold functions specify: 1) when it is optimal to produce; 2) how to allocate units produced to either increase inventory or reduce backorder; and 3) when to fulfill orders from on-hand inventory and when to backorder (in the case of the patient class) and when to reject them (in the case of the impatient class). We show that the priority in inventory allocation among the two classes is not static and instead depends on the backorder level from the class of patient customers. In particular, it is possible to start out fulfilling orders from the impatient class and backordering orders from the patient class and then to switch to fulfilling orders from the patient class and rejecting orders from the impatient class. In addition to characterizing the structure of the optimal policy, we also describe an effective heuristic that retains the essential features of the optimal policy but is significantly simpler to implement. This heuristic performs nearly as well as the optimal policy and significantly outperforms other plausible heuristics.
  • Keywords
    Markov processes; cost reduction; customer profiles; decision making; heuristic programming; inventory management; order processing; Markov decision process; backorder costs; backordering; cost minimisation; customer demand classes; heuristic approach; impatient demand classes; inventory holding costs; lost sales costs; onhand inventory; optimal policy; production-inventory system; Cost function; Equations; Marketing and sales; Markov processes; Production facilities; Resource management; Inventory rationing; Markov decision processes; make-to-stock queues; multiple demand classes; optimal control; production-inventory systems;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Automation Science and Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1545-5955
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TASE.2011.2158645
  • Filename
    5944992