Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid

Extreme weather events and natural disasters cause heavy damage to both human lives and infrastructure, creating isolated areas. The immediate response in the aftermath of a disaster is to provide essentials such as food, drinkable water, and medicine to the people in isolated areas. The problem of...

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Main Author: Nguyen, Dang Viet Anh
Other Authors: Rajesh Piplani
Format: Thesis-Master by Coursework
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164290
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1642902023-06-20T07:30:37Z Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid Nguyen, Dang Viet Anh Rajesh Piplani School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering MRPiplani@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Industrial engineering::Supply chain Extreme weather events and natural disasters cause heavy damage to both human lives and infrastructure, creating isolated areas. The immediate response in the aftermath of a disaster is to provide essentials such as food, drinkable water, and medicine to the people in isolated areas. The problem of transporting relief goods and necessities to the affected area after a disaster deal with the multi level routing problem at the operational level. The challenge in this transportation problem comes from the disruption in the road network to reach the victim locations. The thesis develops a two-echelon vehicle routing problem for application in transportation and supply of necessities to affected areas in the response phase of disaster relief. The first echelon of the problem solves the routing decisions to transport supplies from the primary warehouse to intermediate warehouses or satellites located near the affected area. The second echelon concerns last-mile delivery from the intermediate warehouses to residential clusters in affected area. This research develops an intermodal network consisting of a fleet of trucks responsible for transferring supplies at the first level while drones perform the last-mile delivery task. The 2E-CTVRP helps to leverage the advantages of each type of vehicle to overcome difficulties caused by the disaster to achieve high operational efficiency. Due to the limited response time and equipment, the drones do not necessarily directly visit the demand nodes but deliver supplies to a predefined location in each affected area cluster. To ensure distribution equity, the K-means++ algorithm is utilized to cluster the victim location data and determine the drop-off positions of drones in affected areas. In this study, the mathematical model of 2E-CTVRP is formulated as MILP with the objective function of minimizing the sum of arrival time to solve small-size instances optimally. Moreover, A hybrid metaheuristic based on the Greedy Randomized Adaptive Search Procedure (GRASP) reinforced by path relinking is proposed to achieve solutions for larger instances in a reasonable computing time. The computational experiment on instances with two types of truck fleet sizes at the first echelon is analyzed and presented. Master of Science (Supply Chain and Logistics) 2023-01-18T02:39:51Z 2023-01-18T02:39:51Z 2022 Thesis-Master by Coursework Nguyen, D. V. A. (2022). Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164290 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164290 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Industrial engineering::Supply chain
spellingShingle Engineering::Industrial engineering::Supply chain
Nguyen, Dang Viet Anh
Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid
description Extreme weather events and natural disasters cause heavy damage to both human lives and infrastructure, creating isolated areas. The immediate response in the aftermath of a disaster is to provide essentials such as food, drinkable water, and medicine to the people in isolated areas. The problem of transporting relief goods and necessities to the affected area after a disaster deal with the multi level routing problem at the operational level. The challenge in this transportation problem comes from the disruption in the road network to reach the victim locations. The thesis develops a two-echelon vehicle routing problem for application in transportation and supply of necessities to affected areas in the response phase of disaster relief. The first echelon of the problem solves the routing decisions to transport supplies from the primary warehouse to intermediate warehouses or satellites located near the affected area. The second echelon concerns last-mile delivery from the intermediate warehouses to residential clusters in affected area. This research develops an intermodal network consisting of a fleet of trucks responsible for transferring supplies at the first level while drones perform the last-mile delivery task. The 2E-CTVRP helps to leverage the advantages of each type of vehicle to overcome difficulties caused by the disaster to achieve high operational efficiency. Due to the limited response time and equipment, the drones do not necessarily directly visit the demand nodes but deliver supplies to a predefined location in each affected area cluster. To ensure distribution equity, the K-means++ algorithm is utilized to cluster the victim location data and determine the drop-off positions of drones in affected areas. In this study, the mathematical model of 2E-CTVRP is formulated as MILP with the objective function of minimizing the sum of arrival time to solve small-size instances optimally. Moreover, A hybrid metaheuristic based on the Greedy Randomized Adaptive Search Procedure (GRASP) reinforced by path relinking is proposed to achieve solutions for larger instances in a reasonable computing time. The computational experiment on instances with two types of truck fleet sizes at the first echelon is analyzed and presented.
author2 Rajesh Piplani
author_facet Rajesh Piplani
Nguyen, Dang Viet Anh
format Thesis-Master by Coursework
author Nguyen, Dang Viet Anh
author_sort Nguyen, Dang Viet Anh
title Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid
title_short Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid
title_full Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid
title_fullStr Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid
title_full_unstemmed Two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid
title_sort two-echelon vehicle routing problem for post-disaster aid
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164290
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