Minimising cycle time in an assembly line with human workers
Abstract
Efficient coordination is essential in automotive assembly lines, where multiple workers
collaborate on a single product. This study focuses on optimising the cycle time
of assembly processes involving human workers assigned specific tasks. A simulation
routine was developed by enhancing an existing crowd-simulation algorithm to
calculate and evaluate cycle time. Three optimisation models with various configurations
were then implemented and assessed. The algorithms containing each of
these three models utilise the simulation routine to identify performance bottlenecks
and iteratively refine the solution. The simulation routine also generates the initial
input data for the models. Using only this input with no iterations results in an
estimated cycle time that serves as a lower bound on the optimal simulated cycle
time.
The simulation proved critical in accounting for small time disturbances, such
as prolonged operations or collision avoidance, which significantly impact the cycle
time. For the tested instance, all the solutions generated using the three algorithms
achieved realistic cycle times, being approximately 11% above the derived initial
lower bound. This is to be compared with the initial solutions, before any refining
iterations were performed, which were approximately 18%, 27%, and at least 136%,
respectively, above the initial lower bound.
While all three algorithms demonstrated a potential for solving the type of problem
addressed, further testing across diverse scenarios is required to generalise our
findings. Future work could refine the optimisation models, adding more aspects
necessary in reality, like workload and ergonomics, to enhance productivity in realworld
assembly lines.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2025-06-10Author
Lindmossen, Hannah
Keywords
crowd simulation, manual assembly, walking, humans, optimisation, optimization
Language
eng