Title :
Do we still need daily production target setting in fully automated fabs?
Author :
Yu-Ting Kao ; Chun-Ming Chang ; Shi-Chung Chang
Author_Institution :
Nat. Taiwan Univ., Taipei, Taiwan
Abstract :
Fab operations have evolved to full automation along with advancements of automation technologies in material handling, inspection and manufacturing execution and management. A school of practitioners and re-searchers have been arguing that there need only two levels in short-interval production control of a fully automated fab: wafer release (WR) on the top and real time dispatching in the bottom. They have also raised the question: Are the middle two levels of daily production target setting and machine allocation (DPTS&MA) traditionally designed for shop floor operators still necessary? In this paper, we take a first step to address the question by simulation and comparing the performance of the simplest automated dispatching policy, First-In-First-Out (FIFO), and the outperformed dispatching policy in [7], Fluctuation Smoothing Mean Cycle Time and Least Lot Slack-time(FSMCT+LLS), with a traditional DPTS&MA scheme under the same given WR. FIFO serves as a performance lower bound, FSMCT+LLS servers as the representative of good automated dispatching policies and DPTS&MA captures essence adopted by many practitioners of proportional target tracking and detailed dispatching of FIFO. Simulations are over a benchmarking mini-fab of six stages and five tool groups. Preliminary results show that DPTS&MA outperform FSMCT+LLS and FIFO in line balancing and cycle time performance for both high and low variability scenarios. We shall demonstrate how such a foundation may further be exploited to study if DPTS&MA is needed in the short-interval production control hierarchy of a fully automated fab.
Keywords :
dispatching; factory automation; production control; resource allocation; semiconductor technology; FIFO; automated dispatching policy; daily production target setting; first-in-first-out policy; fluctuation smoothing mean cycle time; fully automated fab; least lot slack time; line balancing; machine allocation; materials handling; real time dispatching; short interval production control; wafer release; Automation; Dispatching; Job shop scheduling; Manufacturing; Throughput; Production flow control hierarchy; daily target setting; dispatching; flat management; mini-fab; simulation;
Conference_Titel :
e-Manufacturing and Design Collaboration Symposium (eMDC), 2014