Title :
Matrix approach to deadlock-free dispatching in multi-class finite buffer flowlines
Author :
Gurel, A. ; Bogdan, S. ; Lewis, F.L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Eastern Mediterranean Univ., Turkey
fDate :
11/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
For finite-buffer manufacturing systems, the major stability issue is "deadlock," rather than "bounded-buffer-length stability." The paper introduces the concept of "system deadlock," defined rigorously in Petri net terms, and system operation with uninterrupted part-flow is characterized in terms of the absence of this condition. For a large class of finite-buffer multiclass re-entrant flowline systems, an analysis of "circular waits" yields necessary and sufficient conditions for the occurrence of "system deadlock." This allows the formulation of a maximally permissive one-step-look-ahead deadlock-avoidance control policy for dispatching jobs, while maximizing the percent utilization of resources. The result is a generalized kanban dispatching strategy, which is more general than the standard multiclass last buffer first serve (LBFS) dispatching strategies for finite buffer flowlines that typically under-utilize the resources. The problem of computational complexity associated with Petri net (PN) applications is overcome by using certain sub-matrices of the PN incidence matrix. Computationally efficient matrix techniques are given for implementing the deadlock-free dispatching policy.
Keywords :
Petri nets; computational complexity; dispatching; matrix algebra; production control; stability; PN incidence matrix; Petri net; Petri net applications; circular waits; computational complexity; computationally efficient matrix techniques; deadlock-free dispatching; finite-buffer manufacturing systems; finite-buffer multiclass re-entrant flowline systems; generalized kanban dispatching strategy; job dispatching; matrix approach; maximally permissive one-step-look-ahead deadlock-avoidance control policy; multiclass finite buffer flowlines; necessary and sufficient conditions; resource utilization maximization; stability; sub-matrices; system deadlock; system operation; uninterrupted part-flow; Control systems; Dispatching; Flexible manufacturing systems; Manufacturing systems; Production; Resource management; Robotics and automation; Stability; Sufficient conditions; System recovery;
Journal_Title :
Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on