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2022 | Book

Elements of Advanced Manufacturing Theory

Authors: Dr. Bruno G. Rüttimann, Dr. Martin T. Stöckli

Publisher: Springer International Publishing

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About this book

This book is the continuation of the textbook Lean Compendium – Introduction to Modern Manufacturing Theory. It extends the theory of mathematical modeling to batch & queue-based cyber-physical production systems. To facilitate learning, the book continues to develop a Cartesian-derived understanding of the system’s behavior by applying manufacturing-specific theorems, corollaries and lemmas. A law-based description enables to model production mathematically and understand upfront their dynamics in terms of WIP generation, lead-times, exit-rates, and on-time delivery performance. While simulation alone only allows to explore the optimum solution, the development of a theory allows to gain knowledge. This improves the learning of the “physics” of manufacturing systems and contributes to a solid production’s understanding and a clear and cognitive problem determination that leads to a thorough mental capture for mastering a systematic design of such highly complex systems.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. The Need for Manufacturing Theory
Abstract
This chapter is mainly based on the paper: Considerations on Present Production Science Theory and Didactics: The Evident Lack of a Rational Manufacturing Theory, JSSM, 2021, 14, 482–501.
Bruno G. Rüttimann, Martin T. Stöckli
Chapter 2. Basic Classification of Production Systems
Abstract
This chapter is mainly based on the paper: From Batch & Queue to Industry 4.0-Type Manufacturing Systems: A Taxonomy of Alternative Production Models, JSSM, 2020, 13, 299–316.
Bruno G. Rüttimann, Martin T. Stöckli
Chapter 3. The Central Importance of the Bottleneck
Abstract
This chapter is mainly based on the paper: Discourse about Linear Programming and Lean Manufacturing: Two Different Approaches with a Similar, Converging Rational, JSSM, 2015, 8, 85–91.
Bruno G. Rüttimann, Martin T. Stöckli
Chapter 4. Elasticity, Lead-Time, and On-Time Delivery
Abstract
This chapter is mainly based on the paper: Exploiting Virtual Elasticity of Production Systems for Respecting OTD—Part 1: Post-Optimality Conditions for Ergodic Order Arrivals in Fixed Capacity Regimes, AJOR, 2020, 10, 321–342.
Bruno G. Rüttimann, Martin T. Stöckli
Chapter 5. Understanding the Advantage of Lean Pull JIT Versus Push B&Q
Abstract
This chapter is mainly based on the paper: Exploiting Virtual Elasticity of Manufacturing Systems to Respect OTD—Part 2: Post-Optimality Conditions for the Cases of Ergodic and Non-ergodic Order Rate with Deterministic Product-Mix, AJOR, 2021, 11, 141–165.
Bruno G. Rüttimann, Martin T. Stöckli
Chapter 6. Flexibility and the One-Off Product Challenge of CPPS
Abstract
The recently experienced hype concerning the so-called “4th Industrial Revolution” of production systems has prompted several papers of various subtopics regarding Cyber-Physical Production Systems (CPPS). However, important aspects such as the modeling of CPPS to understand the theory regarding the performance of highly non-ergodic and non-deterministic flexible manufacturing systems in terms of exit rate (ER), manufacturing lead time (MLT), and on-time delivery (OTD) have not yet been examined systematically and even less modeled analytically.
Bruno G. Rüttimann, Martin T. Stöckli
Chapter 7. Some Critical Considerations About Industry 4.0
Abstract
This chapter bases mainly on the much-cited paper: Lean and Industry 4.0—Twins, Partners, or Contenders? A Due Clarification Regarding the Supposed Clash of Two Production Systems, JSSM, 2016, 9, 485–500.
Bruno G. Rüttimann, Martin T. Stöckli
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Elements of Advanced Manufacturing Theory
Authors
Dr. Bruno G. Rüttimann
Dr. Martin T. Stöckli
Copyright Year
2022
Electronic ISBN
978-3-031-02047-6
Print ISBN
978-3-031-02046-9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-02047-6

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