Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations

The rapid advancement and falling prices of RFID technology is gradually encouraging many companies within the supply chain to consider deployment. Its benefits in comparison to the prevalent barcode are opening up a myriad of possibilities envisioned to attaining operational efficiencies. In an era...

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Main Author: Lin, Jincong.
Other Authors: Low Yoke Hean, Malcolm
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/17026
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-170262023-03-03T20:50:06Z Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations Lin, Jincong. Low Yoke Hean, Malcolm School of Computer Engineering A*STAR SIMTech Koh Niak Wu Li Zhengping DRNTU::Business::Operations management DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering::Computer applications::Physical sciences and engineering The rapid advancement and falling prices of RFID technology is gradually encouraging many companies within the supply chain to consider deployment. Its benefits in comparison to the prevalent barcode are opening up a myriad of possibilities envisioned to attaining operational efficiencies. In an era where product lifecycles and order lead times are ever decreasing, RFID seemed poised to be the solution. Increasing consumer demands necessitate the need for efficient warehousing and distribution operations. Today’s business environments are shifting from supply chain to demand chain, as a result many are faced with minimizing inventory and reducing warehouse cost while keeping retailer’s shelves full. With pressure to reduce inventories, a trend towards smaller and fewer warehouses will transfer warehouse operations into crossdock operations. The objective of this study is to allow a distribution centre (with warehousing and crossdocking coexisting within the same facility) to maintain its current configuration and practices but with the intent of adopting and integrating RFID with their current Warehouse Management System (WMS). Performance metrics are gathered from 2 simulation models based on barcode and RFID technologies followed by a comparative analysis on performance measures and Return on Investment (ROI). Our analysis shows that RFID technology proved to be more effective in such a setup with a 31.3% potential increase in throughput and a decreased pallet staytime at the incoming docks of 40.8%. The ROI analysis resulted in nearly 150% returns over a period of 5 years. The results were in line with other related studies. This project also generated a research paper in collaboration with SIMTech and was showcased at Discovering Engineering 2009 @ NTU. Bachelor of Engineering (Computer Engineering) 2009-05-29T04:06:55Z 2009-05-29T04:06:55Z 2009 2009 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/17026 en Nanyang Technological University 92 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business::Operations management
DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering::Computer applications::Physical sciences and engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::Operations management
DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering::Computer applications::Physical sciences and engineering
Lin, Jincong.
Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations
description The rapid advancement and falling prices of RFID technology is gradually encouraging many companies within the supply chain to consider deployment. Its benefits in comparison to the prevalent barcode are opening up a myriad of possibilities envisioned to attaining operational efficiencies. In an era where product lifecycles and order lead times are ever decreasing, RFID seemed poised to be the solution. Increasing consumer demands necessitate the need for efficient warehousing and distribution operations. Today’s business environments are shifting from supply chain to demand chain, as a result many are faced with minimizing inventory and reducing warehouse cost while keeping retailer’s shelves full. With pressure to reduce inventories, a trend towards smaller and fewer warehouses will transfer warehouse operations into crossdock operations. The objective of this study is to allow a distribution centre (with warehousing and crossdocking coexisting within the same facility) to maintain its current configuration and practices but with the intent of adopting and integrating RFID with their current Warehouse Management System (WMS). Performance metrics are gathered from 2 simulation models based on barcode and RFID technologies followed by a comparative analysis on performance measures and Return on Investment (ROI). Our analysis shows that RFID technology proved to be more effective in such a setup with a 31.3% potential increase in throughput and a decreased pallet staytime at the incoming docks of 40.8%. The ROI analysis resulted in nearly 150% returns over a period of 5 years. The results were in line with other related studies. This project also generated a research paper in collaboration with SIMTech and was showcased at Discovering Engineering 2009 @ NTU.
author2 Low Yoke Hean, Malcolm
author_facet Low Yoke Hean, Malcolm
Lin, Jincong.
format Final Year Project
author Lin, Jincong.
author_sort Lin, Jincong.
title Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations
title_short Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations
title_full Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations
title_fullStr Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations
title_full_unstemmed Simulation study on RFID application to crossdocking operations
title_sort simulation study on rfid application to crossdocking operations
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/17026
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