To Wave Or Not To Wave? Order Release Policies for Warehouses with an Automated Sorter
Author(s)
Gallien, Jérémie; Weber, Théophane
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Show full item recordAbstract
Wave-based release policies are prevalent in warehouses with an automated sorter, and take different
forms depending on how much waves overlap and whether the sorter is split for operating purposes. Waveless
release is emerging as an alternative policy adopted by an increasing number of firms. While that new policy
presents several advantages relative to waves, it also involves the possibility of gridlock at the sorter. In
collaboration with a large US online retailer and using an extensive dataset of detailed flow information,
we first develop a model with validated predictive accuracy for its warehouses operating under a waveless
release policy. We then use that model to compute operational guidelines for dynamically controlling the main
parameter of its waveless policy, with the goal of maximizing throughput while keeping the risk of gridlock
under a specified threshold. Secondly, we leverage that model and dataset to perform through simulation
a performance comparison of wave-based and waveless policies in this context. Our waveless policy yields
larger or equal throughput than the best performing wave-based policy with a lower gridlock probability
in all scenarios considered. Waveless release policies thus appear to merit very serious consideration by
practitioners. Facilities using a non-overlapping wave policy should also consider overlapping waves or a
split sorter policy.
Date issued
2008-09-08Publisher
Cambridge, MA; Alfred P. Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Series/Report no.
MIT Sloan School of Management Working Paper;4714-08
Keywords
wave policies