Flow Rate and Capacity Analysis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Flow Rate and Capacity Analysis

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Unit Load of a Resource Unit ... Reducing the size of the setup batch is one of the most effective ways to reduce the waiting part of the flow time. Load batch: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Flow Rate and Capacity Analysis


1
Flow Rate and Capacity Analysis
  • Throughput and Capacity
  • Resources and Resource Pools
  • Theoretical Capacity
  • Bottleneck Resources
  • Capacity Utilization
  • Product Mix its effect on theoretical capacity
    and profitability
  • Capacity Improvement

2
Throughput and Takt Time
  • Throughput Average Flow Rate
  • The average number of flow units in a stable
    process that flow through any given point of a
    process per unit of time.
  • Takt time 1/(throughput)
  • The time interval between exit of two consecutive
    products. The average activity time at each
    workstation on an assembly line.
  • Chapter 4 was on flow time minimization.
  • Chapter 5 is on throughput maximization.
  • Chapter 4 and 5 are both time minimization.
    Why?

3
Resources in a Process
Process Management
Information structure
Network of Activities and Buffers
Inputs
Outputs
Goods Services
Flow units (customers, data, material, cash,
etc.)
Resources
Labor Capital
4
Resources, Resource Pools, and Resource Pooling
  • Capital Resources Fixed Assets such as land,
    buildings, facilities, machinery and equipment .
  • Human Resources People such as engineers,
    operators, assemblers, chefs, customer-service
    representatives, etc.
  • Resource Unit An individual resource (chef,
    mixer, oven, etc.)
  • Resource Pool A collection of interchangeable
    resource units that can perform an identical set
    of activities.
  • Resource Pooling The combining of separate
    resource pools into a single pool to
  • perform several activities.
  • Unit Load of a Resource Unit (Tp) The amount of
    time the resource works to
  • process each flow unit.

5
Activity, Work Content, Resource, and Unit Load
Activity Resource Work Content (minutes)
Mailroom Mailroom Clerk 0.6
Data Entry Data-entry Clerk 4.2
Initial Processing Claims processor 4.8
Inspection Claims Supervisor 2.2
Final Processing Claims processor 1.8
Resource Unit Load (minutes)
Mailroom Clerk 0.6
Data-entry Clerk 4.2
Claims processor 6.6
Claims Supervisor 2.2
6
Theoretical Capacity
  • Theoretical capacity of a resource unit maximum
    sustainable flow rate if it were fully utilized
  • Theoretical Capacity of a Resource unit
    1/unit load 1/ Tp
  • Theoretical capacity of a resource pool sum of
    all the theoretical capacities of all the
    resource units in that pool
  • Theoretical capacity of a Resource pool Rp
    cp / Tp
  • Theoretical bottleneck The resource pool with
    the minimum theoretical capacity
  • Theoretical capacity of a process Theoretical
    capacity of the theoretical bottleneck

7
Theoretical Capacity
Cross train Claim supervisor to help Mail room
clerk ? Increase Theoretical Capacity
8
Load Batch and Scheduled Availability
  • Load batching a resource processes several flow
    units simultaneously (one oven and 10 loaves of
    bread)
  • Scheduled availability the scheduled time
    period during which a resource unit is available
    for processing flow units (certain hours, certain
    days, total hours per week).
  • Theoretical capacity of a resource unit
  • (1 / Tp) Load batch Scheduled
    availability
  • Theoretical capacity of a resource pool
  • Rp (cp / Tp) Load batch Scheduled
    availability

9
Theoretical Capacity for Physicians Claims
  • Claims supervisors are the bottleneck. Cross
    train claim processor to do a part of claim
    supervisor job ? increase theoretical capacity
  • Throughput ( due to internal constraints and
    external constraints) is always less than the
    theoretical capacity.
  • Suppose while Theoretical capacity 545.5,
    Throughput 480

10
Capacity Utilization
Capacity utilization of a resource pool ?p
Throughput/Theoretical capacity of a resource
pool R/Rp
Capacity utilization of the process ?
Throughput/Theoretical capacity of the
bottleneck resource pool
Resource pool (p) Theoretical capacity of Resource pool (claims/day) (Rp) Capacity Utilization (?pR/Rp) Throughput 480
Mailroom clerk 750 480/75064
Data-entry clerk 856.8 480/85756
Claims processor 654 480/65473
Claims supervisor 545.5 480/54588
88
11
Unit Load for a Product Mix
  • Unit load for a given product mix is computed as
    the weighted average of unit loads of individual
    products.
  • Billing Physician claims, Hospital claims, and
    60/40 mix

Resource Pool UL (Physician) min/claim UL (Hospital) min/claim UL (60-40) mix min/claim
Mailroom clerk 0.6 1.0 0.6(.6)1(.4) 0.76
Data-entry clerk 4.2 5.2 4.60
Claims processor 6.6 7.5 6.96
Claims supervisor 2.2 3.2 2.60
12
Theoretical Capacity for Physicians Claims
Resource pool (p) Scheduled availability (min/day) Unit Load (min/claim) (Tp) Theoretical Capacity of Resource Unit (claims/day) Number of Units in Resource Pool Theoretical Capacity of Resource Pool (claims/day) (Rp)
Mailroom clerk 450 0.6 450/0.6 750 1 7601 750
Data-entry clerk 450 4.2 450/4.2107.1 8 107.18 856.8
Claims processor 360 6.6 360/6.654.5 12 54.512 654
Claims supervisor 240 2.2 240/2.2109.1 5 109.15 545.5
13
Theoretical Capacity for Hospital Claims
Resource pool (p) Scheduled availability (min./day) Unit Load (Tp) (min./claim) Theoretical Capacity of Resource Unit (claims/day) Number of Units in Resource Pool Theoretical Capacity of Resource Pool (Rp) (claims/day)
Mailroom clerk 450 1.0 450 / 1.0 450 1 450 1 450
Data-entry clerk 450 5.2 450 / 5.2 86.5 8 86.5 8 692
Claims processor 360 7.5 360 / 7.5 48 12 48 12 576
Claims supervisor 240 3.2 240 / 3.2 75 5 75 5 375
14
Theoretical Capacity for 60 / 40 Mix
Resource pool (p) Scheduled availability (min./day) Unit Load (Tp) (min./claim) Theoretical Capacity of Resource Unit (claims/day) Number of Units in Resource Pool Theoretical Capacity of Resource Pool Rp (claims/day)
Mailroom clerk 450 0.76 450/0.76592 1 5921 592
Data-entry clerk 450 4.60 450/4.6098 8 988 784
Claims processor 360 6.96 360/6.9651.7 12 51.712 621
Claims supervisor 240 2.60 240/2.6092 5 925 460
Linear Programming Find the optimal product mix
to maximize profit. Greedy Algorithm. Produce
products with highest unit contribution margin
15
Optimal Product Mix
16
From Theoretical Capacity to Effective Capacity
Setup Batch, Total Unit Load, and Net
Availability
  • Setup or Changeover activities related to
    cleaning, resetting and retooling of equipment in
    order to process a different product.
  • Qp Setup batch or lot size the number of
    units processed consecutively after a setup
  • Sp Average time to set up a resource at
    resource pool p for a particular product
  • We can add setup time to work content or subtract
    it from schedule availability. From a managerial
    control point which one is better?
  • Average setup time per unit is then Sp / Qp
  • Tp Unit load (it does not count for the setup
    time)
  • Total unit load Tp Sp / Qp

17
Setup Batch Size
  • What is the right lot size or the size of the
    set up batch?
  • ? lot size ? ? unit load ? ? Capacity.
  • ? lot size ? ? inventory ?? Flow Time.
  • Reducing the size of the setup batch is one of
    the most effective ways to reduce the waiting
    part of the flow time.
  • Load batch the number of units processed
    simultaneously. Often constrained by
    technological capabilities of the resource.
  • Setup batch the number of units processed
    consecutively after a setup. Setup is determined
    managerially

18
Total Unit Load for Product mix
Compute unit load and total unit load for each
Load batch of Regular tile, Jumbo tile, and a
product mix of 75 Regular and 25 Jumbo
Regular Jumbo Mix
Unit Load (Tp) 2 1 (20.75)(10.25)1.75
Sp/Qp 30/3000.1 30/1000.3 (0.10.75)(0.30.25)0.15
Total unit load 20.12.1 10.31.3 1.750.15 1.9 (2.10.75)(1.30.25)1.9
19
Net Availability
  • Theoretical Capacity of a resource unit
  • (1/Unit load) Load batch Scheduled
    availability
  • Scheduled availability the scheduled time
    period during which a
  • resource unit is available for processing flow
    units.
  • Availability loss factor 1 (Net
    Availability/Scheduled Availability)
  • Effective Capacity of a resource unit
  • (1/Total unit load) Load batch Net
    availability
  • Effective Capacity of a pool
  • (cp/Total unit load) Load batch Net
    availability
  • The effective capacity of a process is the
    effective capacity of its
  • slowest resource pool (effective bottleneck).

20
Effective Capacity of a Resource Pool and Process
21
From Theoretical Capacity to Throughput
  • Throughput Process capacity Effective
    capacity Theoretical capacity
  • Theoretical capacity ? Effective Capacity
  • Breakdown or absenteeism (Schedule Availability ?
    Net Availability)
  • Preventive maintenance (Schedule Availability ?
    Net Availability)
  • Setup time (Unit load ? Total unit load) total
    unit load is unit load plus setup time per unit,
    TpSp/Qp,
  • Effective Capacity ? Process Capacity
  • Internal starvation (from preceding station)
  • Internal blockage (due to next station)
  • Process Capacity ? Throughput
  • External starvation (supply of row material)
  • External blockage (product demand)

22
Improving Theoretical Capacity
  • Theoretical capacity of a pool
  • (cp/Total unit load) Load batch Scheduled
    availability
  • Decrease unit load on the bottleneck Decrease
    the work content of the activity performed by the
    bottleneck resource pool.
  • Increase Scheduled Availability of the
    bottleneck Add more hours to the resource such
    as adding overtime or second shift operations
  • Increase the Load Batch of the bottleneck
    Expanding the resource will increase resource
    capacity
  • Increase the number of resources at bottleneck
    resource Adding units to the bottleneck
    resource pool will increase resource capacity

23
Improving Effective Capacity
  • Increasing net availability
  • Regular Maintenance of equipment
  • Perform maintenance after production time
  • Reducing setup waste
  • Reduce the setup time
  • Improve product mix
  • Caution Increasing batch size or length of run ?
    increased inventory ? longer flow times.

24
Internal Bottlenecks
  • Internal Bottleneck ? Throughput is equal to
    Process Capacity
  • The output of the process is limited by the
    processs own constraints (the bottleneck
    resource)
  • Starvation If we have two raw material for a
    process and one is unavailable.
  • Blockage If the buffer is not big enough
    upstream and there is no place for the product to
    go
  • Internal bottle neck will require increasing the
    capacity of the bottle neck to a capacity where a
    new bottleneck will appear.
  • Once the old bottleneck does not have the lowest
    capacity do not continue to increase capacity. It
    will not increase overall capacity any further.

25
External Bottlenecks
  • External Bottleneck ? Throughput is less than to
    Process Capacity
  • The output of the process is limited by
    conditions external to the boundaries of the
    internal process constraints. Examples include
    demand for product, raw material shortages.
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