DocumentCode :
34994
Title :
Asymptotically Optimal Algorithms for One-to-One Pickup and Delivery Problems With Applications to Transportation Systems
Author :
Treleaven, Kyle ; Pavone, Marco ; Frazzoli, Emilio
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Aeronaut. & Astronaut., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume :
58
Issue :
9
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Sept. 2013
Firstpage :
2261
Lastpage :
2276
Abstract :
Pickup and delivery problems (PDPs), in which objects or people have to be transported between specific locations, are among the most common combinatorial problems in real-world logistical operations. A widely-encountered type of PDP is the Stacker Crane Problem (SCP), where each commodity/customer is associated with a pickup location and a delivery location, and the objective is to find a minimum-length tour visiting all locations with the constraint that each pickup location and its associated delivery location are visited in immediate, consecutive order. The SCP is NP-Hard and the best known approximation algorithm only provides a 9/5 approximation ratio. In this paper, we examine an embedding of the SCP within a stochastic framework, and our objective is three-fold: First, we describe a large class of algorithms for the SCP, where every member is asymptotically optimal, i.e., it produces, almost surely, a solution approaching the optimal one as the number of pickups/deliveries goes to infinity; moreover, one can achieve computational complexity O(n2+ε) within the class, where n is the number of pickup/delivery pairs and ε is an arbitrarily small positive constant. Second, we characterize the length of the optimal SCP tour asymptotically. Finally, we study a dynamic version of the SCP, whereby pickup and delivery requests arrive according to a Poisson process, and which serves as a model for large-scale demand-responsive transport (DRT) systems. For such a dynamic counterpart of the SCP, we derive a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of stable vehicle routing policies, which depends only on the workspace geometry, the distributions of pickup and delivery points, the arrival rate of requests, and the number of vehicles. Our results leverage a novel connection between the Euclidean Bipartite Matching Problem and the theory of random permutations, and, for the dynamic setting, exhibit novel features that are absent in tr- ditional spatially-distributed queueing systems.
Keywords :
approximation theory; combinatorial mathematics; computational complexity; geometry; goods distribution; queueing theory; stochastic processes; vehicle routing; DRT; Euclidean bipartite matching problem; NP-Hard; PDP; Poisson process; SCP; approximation algorithm; asymptotically optimal algorithms; combinatorial problems; computational complexity; large-scale demand-responsive transport systems; minimum-length tour; one-to-one pickup and delivery problems; real-world logistical operations; spatially-distributed queueing systems; stacker crane problem; stochastic framework; transportation systems; vehicle routing policies; workspace geometry; Cooperative control; multi-vehicle systems; optimal matching; queueing analysis; transportation systems;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9286
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TAC.2013.2259993
Filename :
6507626
Link To Document :
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