Twin-crane scheduling during seaside workload peaks with a dedicated handshake area

ORCID
0000-0001-8329-4320
Affiliation
Bergische Universität Wuppertal Professur für BWL, insbesondere Produktion und Logistik, Wuppertal, Germany
Zey, Lennart;
Affiliation
Bergische Universität Wuppertal Professur für BWL, insbesondere Produktion und Logistik, Wuppertal, Germany
Briskorn, Dirk;
GND
130246557
ORCID
0000-0002-1681-4856
Affiliation
Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena Lehrstuhl für Operations Management
Boysen, Nils

To enable the efficient division of labor in container yards, many large ports apply twin cranes, two identical automated stacking cranes each dedicated to one of the transfer zones on the seaside and landside. The use of a handshake area, a bay of containers that separates the dedicated areas of the two cranes, is a simple means to avoid crane interference. Inbound containers arriving in the transfer zone of one crane and dedicated to a stacking position of the other crane’s area are placed intermediately in the handshake area by the first crane and then taken over by the second crane, and vice versa for outbound containers. Existing research only evaluates simple heuristics and rule-based approaches for the coordination of twin cranes interconnected by a handshake area. For this setting, accounting for precedence constraints due to stacking containers in the handshake area, we derive exact solution procedures under a makespan minimization objective. In this way, a comprehensive computational evaluation is enabled, which benchmarks heuristics with optimal solutions and additionally compares alternative crane settings (i.e., without workload sharing and cooperation with flexible handover). We further provide insights into where to position the handshake area. Our results reveal that when planning is too simple (i.e., with a rule-based approach), optimality gaps become large, but with sophisticated optimization, the price of a simplified crane coordination via a handshake area is low.

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