Efficient Management of Compact Storage Systems


By Nima Zaerpour, Erasmus University, February 2013 

Abstract

Warehouses are important nodes in supply chains. They decouple supply from demand in time, assortment, quantity, and space. By doing so, economies of scale can be achieved in transport, as warehouses allow to regroup transport flows leading to lower cost. They also allow postponement of value addition, increasing service levels at lower inventory levels. Warehouses are particularly needed in densely populated areas, close to where demand is generated and labour is available. Warehouses require much space to realise economies of scale. Warehouse buildings are often quite large, more than 10,000 m2 built space is common, and much infrastructure outside the building is needed. Unfortunately, in many of the urbanised areas, space for such large facilities has become short. In order to address this issue, enterprises are moving toward next generation storage systems, namely “three-dimensional (3D) compact storage systems”. These systems are designed with the objective to save floor space and labour costs, and increase the reliability of the order picking process. Several types of 3D compact storage systems exist with different handling systems, such as S/R machines, conveyors, shuttles and elevators. They take care of horizontal, vertical and depth movements. Zaerpour’s dissertation focuses on new types of 3D compact storage systems, in particular live-cube storage systems, where each unit load rests on a shuttle that can move in horizontal and depth directions, in co-operation with shuttles of other unit loads. In such a system, at least one empty storage slot per level is required.

One of the key performance measures for compact storage systems, which is also the focus of this dissertation, is response time. Zaerpour analyses these systems at two decision-making levels. At the tactical (design) decision level, we focus on the rack-dimensioning problem aiming at short response times. At the operational decision level, he investigates storage assignment and retrieval sequencing problems to shorten the response time. 

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