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Routing order pickers in a warehouse with a middle aisle

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TLDR
An algorithm is presented that can find shortest order picking tours in this type of warehouses and it appears that in many cases the average order picking time can be decreased significantly by adding a middle aisle to the layout.
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This article is published in European Journal of Operational Research.The article was published on 2001-08-16 and is currently open access. It has received 309 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Aisle & Order picking.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Order Batching and Picker Routing in manual order picking systems: the benefits of integrated routing

TL;DR: By means of numerical experiments it is shown that paying more attention to the Picker Routing Problem results in a substantial improvement of the solution quality without increasing computing times.
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Optimizing fishbone aisles for dual-command operations in a warehouse

TL;DR: This work develops analytical expressions for travel between pallet locations for the fishbone design and compares fishbone warehouses that have been optimized for dual-command to traditional warehouses that has been optimized in the same manner, and shows that an optimal fishbones design reduces dual- command travel by 10–15%.
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Utilizing individual picker skills to improve order batching in a warehouse

TL;DR: This paper shows that it is able to improve state-of-the-art batching and routing methods by almost 10% taking skill differences among pickers into account in minimizing the sum of total order processing time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exact algorithms for the order picking problem

TL;DR: In this article, a sparse formulation in mixed-integer programming is strengthened by preprocessing and valid inequalities, and a dynamic programming approach generalizing known algorithms for two or three cross-aisles is proposed and evaluated experimentally.
Journal ArticleDOI

Robotics in order picking: evaluating warehouse layouts for pick, place, and transport vehicle routing systems

TL;DR: An extensive numerical analysis reveals that, increasing the number of cross aisles decreases system performance, but centrally located packing stations improve system performance; and the average distance from each pick location to the packing station and theaverage distance between pick locations are effective metrics for identifying specific fleet modifications that are likely to yield system improvements.
References
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Book

An Algorithm for the Traveling Salesman Problem

TL;DR: A “branch and bound” algorithm is presented for solving the traveling salesman problem, where the set of all tours feasible solutions is broken up into increasingly small subsets by a procedure called branching.
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Order-Picking in a Rectangular Warehouse: A Solvable Case of the Traveling Salesman Problem

TL;DR: This paper addresses the problem of order-picking in a rectangular warehouse that contains crossovers only at the ends of aisles by presenting an algorithm for picking an order in minimum time.
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Distance approximations for routing manual pickers in a warehouse

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate and compare strategies for routing a manual picker through a simple warehouse, by deriving equations which relate route length to warehouse attributes, and several rules of thumb are derived for selection of order picking strategies and optimization of warehouse shape.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of order picking routeing policies

TL;DR: The experimental results clearly indicate that the optimal routeing procedure generates significantly shorter routes than heuristic methods, and the shape of the warehouse and the location of the pick‐up/drop‐off point can affect the picking efficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Routing orderpickers in a warehouse: a comparison between optimal and heuristic solutions

TL;DR: In this paper, the problem of finding efficient orderpicking routes for both conventional warehouses, where pickers have a central depot for picking up and depositing carts and pick lists, and modern warehouses where order picking trucks can pick up and deposit pallets at the head of every aisle without returning to the depot is studied.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (6)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Routing order pickers in a warehouse with a middle aisle" ?

This paper considers a parallel aisle warehouse, where order pickers can change aisles at the ends of every aisle and also at a cross aisle halfway along the aisles. An algorithm is presented that can find shortest order picking tours in this type of warehouses. 

In practice, the problem of finding order picking tours in a warehouse is mainly solved by the so-called S-shape heuristic in which order pickers move in a S-shape curve along the pick locations skipping the aisles where nothing has to be picked. 

The small peak for 3 aisles in the curve for the warehouse without cross aisles, is due to the fact that at least one of the aisles has to be entered and left from the same side to ensure that the order picker ends his tour at the front of the warehouse. 

Let Yj be the subgraph of the warehouse graph consisting of vertices bj and cj together with all edges and vertices between bj and cj and define L+yj = L − j ∪ Yj . 

Other order picking activities, like positioning the truck or crane at the pick location, picking items from the pick location and putting them onto a product carrier, have to be performed anyway. 

the algorithm can be used in warehouses with only one or two possibilities for aisle changing, by setting the appropriate distances between the aisles to infinity.