Transportation Problems PDF
Transportation Problems PDF
Problems
Transportation Problem
• A distribution-type problem in which supplies of goods that are held
at various locations are to be distributed to other receiving locations.
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Formulating the Model
• A transportation problem
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Transshipment Problems
•A transportation problem in which some locations
are used as intermediate shipping points, thereby
serving both as origins and as destinations.
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Assignment Problems
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Schematic of a Transportation Problem
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Transportation Table
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Special Cases of Transportation Problems
• Maximization
•Transportation-type problems that concern profits or
revenues rather than costs with the objective to maximize
profits rather than to minimize costs.
• Unacceptable Routes
•Certain origin-destination combinations may be
unacceptable due to weather factors, equipment
breakdowns, labor problems, or skill requirements that
either prohibit, or make undesirable, certain combinations
(routes).
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Special Cases of Transportation Problems
• Situations in which supply and demand are not equal such that it is
necessary to modify the original problem so that supply and demand
are equalized.
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Problem 1
Wheat is harvested in the Midwest and stored in grain elevators in three different cities – Kansas city, Omaha, and Des Moines.
These grain elevators supply three flour mills, located in Chicago, St. Louis, and Cincinnati. Grain is shipped to the mills in
railroad cars, each car capable of holding 1 ton of wheat. Each grain elevator is able to supply 150, 175, 275 tons (i.e. railroad cars)
of wheat to the mills on a monthly basis, respectively. Each mill demands 200, 100, and 300 tons of wheat per month,
respectively.
The cost of transporting 1 ton of wheat from each grain elevator (source) to each mill (destination) differs, according to the
distance and rail system. The costs are shown in the following Table. Determine how many tons of wheat to transport from each
elevator to each mill monthly basis to minimize the total cost of transportation.
Minimize,
Total cost of transportation, 𝑍 = 6𝑥11 + 8𝑥12 + 10𝑥13 + 7𝑥21 + 11𝑥22 + 11𝑥23 +4𝑥31 + 5𝑥32 + 12𝑥33
Subject to constraints,
𝑥𝑖𝑗 ≥ 0
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Exercise 2
The Easy Time Grocery chain operates in major metropolitan areas on the East Coast. The
stores have a “no frills” approach, with low overhead and high volume. They generally buy
their stock in volume at low prices. However, in some cases they actually buy stock at stores
in other areas and ship it in. They can do this because of high prices in the cities they operate
in compared with costs in other locations. One example is baby food. Easy Time purchases
baby food at stores in Albany, Birmingham, Claremont, Dover, and Edison and then trucks it
to six stores in and around New York city. The stores in the outlying areas know what Easy
Time is up to, so they limit the number of cases of baby food Easy Time can purchase. The
following table shows the profit Easy Time makes per case of baby food, based on where the
chain purchases it and at which store it is sold, plus available baby food per week at purchase
locations and the shelf space available at each Easy Time store per week:
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Purchase Easy Time Store (Profit/case ($))
Location 1 2 3 4 5 6 Supply
Albany 9 8 11 12 7 8 26
Bingamton 10 10 8 6 9 7 40
Claremont 8 6 6 5 7 4 20
Dover 4 6 9 5 8 10 40
Edison 12 10 8 9 6 7 45
Demand 25 15 30 18 27 35
Determine where Easy Time should purchase baby food and how the food should be
distributed to maximize profit.
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A Network Diagram of a Transshipment Problem
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Schematic of a Transportation Problem
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Transportation Table
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Transshipment Problem
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Transhipment Model
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Using the Transportation Problem to Solve Aggregate
Planning Problems
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Exercise – Aggregate Planning
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Transportation Table for the Aggregate Planning Problem
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Using the Transportation Problem to Solve Location
Planning Problems
• Comparing transportation costs for alternative locations for new facilities to minimize total
cost.
• Provides planners an opportunity to assess the impact of each warehouse location on the
total distribution costs for the system.
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Assignment Problem
A manager has prepared a table that shows the cost of performing each of five
jobs by each of five employees (see Table). According to this table, job I will cost $15 if
done by Al. $20 if it is done by Bill, and so on. The manager has stated that his goal is
to develop a set of job assignments that will minimize the total cost of getting all four
jobs done. It is further required that the jobs be performed simultaneously, thus
requiring one job being assigned to each employee.
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