The opportunistic replacement problem: theoretical analyses and numerical tests
Journal article, 2012

We consider a model for determining optimal opportunistic maintenance schedules with respect to a maximum replacement interval. This problem generalizes that of Dickman et al. (J Oper Res Soc India 28:165–175, 1991) and is a natural starting point for modelling replacement schedules of more complex systems. We show that this basic opportunistic replacement problem is NP-hard, that the convex hull of the set of feasible replacement schedules is full-dimensional, that all the inequalities of the model are facet-inducing, and present a new class of facets obtained through a {0,1/2}-Chvátal–Gomory rounding. For costs monotone with time, a class of elimination constraints is introduced to reduce the computation time; it allows maintenance only when the replacement of at least one component is necessary. For costs decreasing with time, these constraints eliminate non-optimal solutions. When maintenance occasions are fixed, the remaining problem is stated as a linear program and solved by a greedy procedure. Results from a case study on aircraft engine maintenance illustrate the advantage of the optimization model over simpler policies. We include the new class of facets in a branch-and-cut framework and note a decrease in the number of branch-and-bound nodes and simplex iterations for most instance classes with time dependent costs. For instance classes with time independent costs and few components the elimination constraints are used favorably. For fixed maintenance occasions the greedy procedure reduces the computation time as compared with linear programming techniques for all instances tested.

Maintenance optimization

Polyhedral analysis

Mixed integer programming

Complexity analysis

Author

Torgny Almgren

Volvo

Niclas Andréasson

Michael Patriksson

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Mathematics

University of Gothenburg

Ann-Brith Strömberg

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Mathematics

University of Gothenburg

Adam Wojciechowski

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Mathematics

University of Gothenburg

Magnus Önnheim

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Mathematics

Mathematical Methods of Operations Research

1432-2994 (ISSN) 1432-5217 (eISSN)

Vol. 76 3 289-319

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Energy

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Computational Mathematics

Roots

Basic sciences

DOI

10.1007/s00186-012-0400-y

More information

Created

10/8/2017