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Transportation and Assignment Problems: Operations Research

The document discusses transportation and assignment problems in operations research. It describes transportation problems as determining how to supply factories to warehouses and how much to supply. It provides an overview of the key steps to solve transportation problems: formulating the problem in a matrix, obtaining an initial basic feasible solution, testing for optimality, and determining a new optimal solution if needed. It also discusses special cases like unbalanced problems and degeneracy. The document concludes by describing assignment problems as a special case of transportation problems where each source supplies one destination.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
292 views30 pages

Transportation and Assignment Problems: Operations Research

The document discusses transportation and assignment problems in operations research. It describes transportation problems as determining how to supply factories to warehouses and how much to supply. It provides an overview of the key steps to solve transportation problems: formulating the problem in a matrix, obtaining an initial basic feasible solution, testing for optimality, and determining a new optimal solution if needed. It also discusses special cases like unbalanced problems and degeneracy. The document concludes by describing assignment problems as a special case of transportation problems where each source supplies one destination.

Uploaded by

Visal Toha
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Transportation and Assignment Problems

Operations Research

Which Factory should supply to which Warehouse and how much?


Warehouse 1 Factory 1 Factory 2

Warehouse 2 Warehouse 3

Factory 3

What is a transportation problem?

Transportation as a Linear Programming Problem

Transportation Problem - Matrix

Transportation Problem - Matrix


Transportation Cost of route AB (from Factory A to Store B)

Is Total Supply = Total Demand?

Transportation Problem - Types


Balanced
Total Supply = Total Demand

Unbalanced
Supply not equal to demand

Need to add a dummy supply or demand to balance the problem

How to solve a transportation problem?


1. Formulate the problem and set up in matrix form 2. Obtain initial basic feasible solution 3. Test the solution for optimality 4. If yes, Stop 5. If no, determine new optimal solution 6. Go to step 3

Methods for finding initial solution


North West Corner Method Minimum Matrix Method Vogels Corner Method

North West Corner Method

Initial Solution using NWCM

What is the number of positive allocations? -------- (6) What is (number of rows + number of columns -1) -------- (3+4-1 = 6)

Testing for optimality


Is there any alternative route (empty cell) which is better than existing routes? i.e. If I shift one unit from current route to any other route, does overall cost increase or decrease? Which out of alternative routes is best (which one reduces cost by maximum amount)?

Stepping Stones Method


To evaluate each empty cell, draw a closed path starting at empty cell and returning to empty cell through at least 3 occupied cells. Add +1 (one unit) to the empty cell. Correspondingly subtract/ add one unit to each occupied cell on the closed path so that row and column sums remain balanced.

Increase in transportation cost = +4-6+5-3 = 0. There is no benefit to be gained by shifting units to route AD.

Initial solution itself was optimal in this case!

Special Cases
Multiple optimum solution A scenario where multiple routes have same overall cost. Unbalanced transportation problem - If total supply not equal to total demand Degeneracy number of positive allocations < (number of rows + number of columns -1) Maximization

Unbalanced transportation problem


If supply is more add a dummy demand column If demand is more add a dummy supply column Dummy cells have transportation cost zero
Which one is greater, demand or supply? What should we add, dummy row or column?

Now solve using regular approach

Degeneracy

Degeneracy - Setting up a new problem


Introduce artificial small quantity d that doesnt otherwise impact supply-demand constraints

Maximization Problem

Convert to minimization problem

Assignment Problem
Special case of transportation problem Here each source can supply to only one destination
Number of sources equal to number of destinations Only one unit supplied from source to destination

Assigning jobs to workers Assigning teachers to classes Can be solved using simple enumeration of combinations, regular transportation method or simplex method

Hungarian Method - Kuhn

Identify rows with exactly one zero. Draw a square on that zero. Cross out all other zeros in that column. Identify columns with exactly one zero. Draw a square on that zero. Cross out all other zeros in that row. If all zeros have either been marked with square or crossed out If there is at least one and only one square in each row, problem has been solved.

Draw minimum number of lines to cover all zeros.

Special cases
Unbalanced Sources and Destinations not equal.
Add a dummy source or destination with 0 cost.

Maximization
Convert to minimization problem using opportunity cost

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