D'Alonzo, Damiano
(2023)
Design and management of a supply chain: a joint location-inventory problem under uncertainty (Part B).
[Laurea magistrale], Università di Bologna, Corso di Studio in
Ingegneria gestionale [LM-DM270], Documento full-text non disponibile
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Abstract
In recent years, global supply chains have increasingly suffered from reliability issues due to various external and difficult to-manage events. The following paper aims to build an integrated approach for the design of a Supply Chain under the risk of disruption and demand fluctuation. The study is
divided in two parts: a mathematical optimization model, to identify the optimal design and assignments customer-facility, and a discrete-events simulation of the resulting network. The first
one describes a model in which plant location decisions are influenced by variables such as distance
to customers, investments needed to open plants and centralization phenomena that help contain
the risk of demand variability (Risk Pooling). The entire model has been built with a proactive
approach to manage the risk of disruptions assigning to each customer two types of open facilities:
one that will serve it under normal conditions and a back-up facility, which comes into operation
when the main facility has failed. The study is conducted on a relatively small number of instances
due to the computational complexity, a matheuristic approach can be found in part A of the paper
to evaluate the problem with a larger set of players. Once the network is built, a discrete events
Supply Chain simulation (SCS) has been implemented to analyze the stock flow within the facilities
warehouses, the actual impact of disruptions and the role of the back-up facilities which suffer a
great stress on their inventory due to a large increase in demand caused by the disruptions. Therefore, simulation follows a reactive approach, in which customers are
redistributed among facilities according to the interruptions that may occur in the system and to
the assignments deriving from the design model. Lastly, the most important results of the study will
be reported, analyzing the role of lead time in a reactive approach for the occurrence of disruptions
and comparing the two models in terms of costs.
Abstract
In recent years, global supply chains have increasingly suffered from reliability issues due to various external and difficult to-manage events. The following paper aims to build an integrated approach for the design of a Supply Chain under the risk of disruption and demand fluctuation. The study is
divided in two parts: a mathematical optimization model, to identify the optimal design and assignments customer-facility, and a discrete-events simulation of the resulting network. The first
one describes a model in which plant location decisions are influenced by variables such as distance
to customers, investments needed to open plants and centralization phenomena that help contain
the risk of demand variability (Risk Pooling). The entire model has been built with a proactive
approach to manage the risk of disruptions assigning to each customer two types of open facilities:
one that will serve it under normal conditions and a back-up facility, which comes into operation
when the main facility has failed. The study is conducted on a relatively small number of instances
due to the computational complexity, a matheuristic approach can be found in part A of the paper
to evaluate the problem with a larger set of players. Once the network is built, a discrete events
Supply Chain simulation (SCS) has been implemented to analyze the stock flow within the facilities
warehouses, the actual impact of disruptions and the role of the back-up facilities which suffer a
great stress on their inventory due to a large increase in demand caused by the disruptions. Therefore, simulation follows a reactive approach, in which customers are
redistributed among facilities according to the interruptions that may occur in the system and to
the assignments deriving from the design model. Lastly, the most important results of the study will
be reported, analyzing the role of lead time in a reactive approach for the occurrence of disruptions
and comparing the two models in terms of costs.
Tipologia del documento
Tesi di laurea
(Laurea magistrale)
Autore della tesi
D'Alonzo, Damiano
Relatore della tesi
Correlatore della tesi
Scuola
Corso di studio
Ordinamento Cds
DM270
Parole chiave
Supply Chain Risk Management,Facility Location Problem,Disruptions,Risk Pooling,SC Simulation
Data di discussione della Tesi
2 Febbraio 2023
URI
Altri metadati
Tipologia del documento
Tesi di laurea
(NON SPECIFICATO)
Autore della tesi
D'Alonzo, Damiano
Relatore della tesi
Correlatore della tesi
Scuola
Corso di studio
Ordinamento Cds
DM270
Parole chiave
Supply Chain Risk Management,Facility Location Problem,Disruptions,Risk Pooling,SC Simulation
Data di discussione della Tesi
2 Febbraio 2023
URI
Gestione del documento: