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Journal ArticleDOI

An EOQ model for items with Weibull distribution deterioration, shortages and trended demand: an extension of Philip's model

TLDR
An inventory model for deteriorating items with instantaneous supply, linearly increasing demand and shortages in inventory is presented and the theory for finding the optimal solution of the problem is developed.
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This article is published in Computers & Operations Research.The article was published on 1998-07-01. It has received 180 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Inventory control & Weibull distribution.

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Citations
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Recent trends in modeling of deteriorating inventory

TL;DR: The motivations, extensions and generalizations of various models in each sub-class have been discussed in brief to bring out pertinent information regarding model developments in the last decade.
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Supply Chain Strategies for Perishable Products: The Case of Fresh Produce

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined supply chain design strategies for a specific type of perishable product (fresh produce) using melons and sweet corn as examples, and showed that the appropriate model to minimize lost value in the supply chain is a hybrid of a responsive model from post-harvest to cooling, followed by an efficient model in the remainder of the chain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vehicle routing problem with time-windows for perishable food delivery

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors extended a vehicle routing problem with time-windows by considering the randomness of the perishable food delivery process, and constructed a SVRPTW model, to obtain optimal delivery routes, loads, fleet dispatching and departure times for delivering perishable foods from a distribution center.
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An inventory model for deteriorating items with partial backlogging and permissible delay in payments

TL;DR: An inventory model with a varying rate of deterioration and partial backlogging rate under the condition of permissible delay in payments used in conjunction with the economic order quantity model is discussed.
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The effect of preservation technology investment on a non-instantaneous deteriorating inventory model

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of preservation technology investment on inventory decisions is studied in an inventory system with a non-instantaneous deteriorating item, and the basic results of fractional programming are employed to prove the uniqueness of the global maximum for each case.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Survey of Literature on Continuously Deteriorating Inventory Models

TL;DR: A complete and up-to-date survey of published inventory literature for the deteriorating (decaying) inventory models and a classification scheme is presented along with suggestions for future research.
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An EOQ Model for Items with Weibull Distribution Deterioration

TL;DR: In this paper, an inventory model is considered for deteriorating items with a variable rate of deterioration, where deterioration means decay, damage or spoilage such that the item cannot be used for its original purpose.
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(T, S i ) Policy Inventory Model for Deteriorating Items with Time Proportional Demand

TL;DR: In this article, an EOQ model is reconsidered in which the demand rate is changing linearly with time and the deterioration is assumed to be a constant fraction of the onhand inventory.
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Optimum production lot size model for a system with deteriorating inventory

TL;DR: In this paper, a production lot size model for an inventory system with deteriorating items was developed for both the varying and constant rate of deterioration, and a numerical example was solved to show the impact of deterioration.
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A Generalized EOQ Model for Items with Weibull Distribution Deterioration

TL;DR: In this article, a generalized version of Covert and Philip's EOQ model with Weibull distribution deterioration is developed, in which the 3-parameter WeIBull distribution is used to represent the time to deterioration.
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