Simulation-based planning of maintenance activities by a shifting priority method
Paper in proceeding, 2015

Machine failures are major causes of direct downtime as well as system losses (blocked and idle times) in production flows. A previous case study shows that prioritizing bottleneck machines over others has the potential to increase the throughput by about 5%. However, the bottleneck machine in a production system is not static throughout the process of production but shifts from time to time. The approach for this paper is to integrate dynamic maintenance strategies into scheduling of reactive maintenance using Discrete Event Simulation. The aim of the paper is to investigate how a shifting priority strategy could be integrated into the scheduling of reactive maintenance. The approach is applied to and evaluated in an automotive case-study, using simulation for decision support. This shows how to shift prioritization by tracking the momentary bottleneck of the system. The effect of shifting priorities for planning maintenance activities and its specific limitations is discussed.

Dynamic bottleneck detection

Maintenance Planning

Discrete Event Simulation

Author

Maheshwaran Gopalakrishnan

Chalmers, Product and Production Development, Production Systems

Anders Skoogh

Chalmers, Product and Production Development, Production Systems

Christoph Laroque

University of Applied Sciences of Zwickau

Proceedings - Winter Simulation Conference

08917736 (ISSN)

2168-2179

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Reliability and Maintenance

Areas of Advance

Production

DOI

10.1109/WSC.2014.7020061

More information

Latest update

8/8/2023 6