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Growing Science » Authors » Moeen Sammak Jalali

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Sort articles by: Volume | Date | Most Rates | Most Views | Reviews | Alphabet
1.

Designing an advanced available-to-promise mechanism compatible with the make-to-forecast production systems through integrating inventory allocation and job shop scheduling with due dates and weighte Pages 451-462 Right click to download the paper Download PDF

Authors: Masoud Rabbani, Mina Monshi, Neda Manavizadeh, Moeen Sammak Jalali

doi 10.5267/j.ijiec.2015.12.004 Crossmark

Keywords:

Abstract:
In the competitive business world, applying a reliable and powerful mechanism to support decision makers in manufacturing companies and helping them save time by considering varieties of effective factors is an inevitable issue. Advanced Available-to-Promise is a perfect tool to design and perform such a mechanism. In this study, this mechanism which is compatible with the Make-to-Forecast production systems is presented. The ability to distinguish between batch mode and real-time mode advanced available-to-promise is one of the unique superiorities of the proposed model. We also try to strengthen this mechanism by integrating the inventory allocation and job shop scheduling by considering due dates and weighted earliness/tardiness cost that leads to more precise decisions. A mixed integer programming (MIP) model and a heuristic algorithm according to its disability to solve large size problems are presented. The designed experiments and the obtained results have proved the efficiency of the proposed heuristic method.
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Journal: IJIEC | Year: 2016 | Volume: 7 | Issue: 3 | Views: 2535 | Reviews: 0

 
2.

Impact of end of lease contracts’ option on joint pricing and inventory decisions of remanufacturable leased products Pages 191-204 Right click to download the paper Download PDF

Authors: M. Rabbani, S. Keyhanian, Mansure Hasannia, Marzieh Eskandari, Moeen Sammak Jalali

doi 10.5267/j.ijiec.2015.11.002 Crossmark

Keywords: End options, Leasing, Mathematical Model, Pricing, Remanufacturing

Abstract:
Leasing currently plays an important role for the global economy. The equipment leasing earning acquired through leasing rather than cash or credit, has reached a dominant level. With this regards, this paper represents a basic mixed-integer non-linear programming model. The study deliberates a firm that leases new products and remanufactured leased merchandises. The proposed study considers the end of lease contract, which contains several options: Return the leased product, return the used product and purchase other remanufactured product and buying the leased product. The primary objective is to maximize the discrepancy between the revenue and the costs of a firm, which leases new products as well as selling remanufactured ones. The product deteriorates with time and the difference between a new and used good is obvious. The product must undergo a remanufacturing procedure before being sold as a remanufactured product.
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Journal: IJIEC | Year: 2016 | Volume: 7 | Issue: 2 | Views: 2484 | Reviews: 0

 
3.

Proactive and reactive inventory policies in humanitarian operations Pages 253-272 Right click to download the paper Download PDF

Authors: Masoud Rabbani, Neda Manavizadeh, Mehran Samavati, Moeen Sammak Jalali

doi 10.5267/j.uscm.2015.3.004 Crossmark

Keywords: Continuous review, Humanitarian relief supply chain, Perishable relief supplies, Proactive and reactive inventory policies

Abstract:
Inventory planning for the pre- and post-disaster phases of disaster relief lifecycle is a challenging problem associated with the humanitarian relief supply chains. In this work, two mathematical models are presented encompassing the whole disaster relief lifecycle. By accounting for holding costs of perishable supplies, a two-stage stochastic programming model is first developed by which the inventory prepositioning locations, inventory levels, and short-term distribution quantities are determined. For the recovery phase, this research adapts the well-known continuous review (Q, r) inventory model for relief warehouses while accounting for the inherent epistemic uncertainty in the required data by using the fuzzy programming. A case study of Iranian Red Cross is also provided to illustrate the applicability of the first model and to demonstrate how it supports the two first phases of disaster lifecycle. Additionally, a numerical example is presented to demonstrate the applicability of the (Q, r) model for the recovery phase. Lastly, the impact of penalty costs on the solutions is discussed.
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Journal: USCM | Year: 2015 | Volume: 3 | Issue: 3 | Views: 2818 | Reviews: 0

 

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