LPT - PPT Program Line
LPT - PPT Program Line
Pavani Harsha
Acknowledgements
Introduction:
Quantitative methods used in Textile industry: Linear programming technique - Cotton mixing - Scheduling Forecasting in apparel industry - Seasonal Forecasting Inventory control Various production stages CPM/ PERT - two or more simultaneous projects on time Transportation technique Raw materials & finished goods
LPT for Cotton Mixing Is Cotton Cost a big factor? Around 60 % of total production cost
Cost Breakdown in a Typical Textile Mill (%)
Fiber Cost Capital Cost Labor Cost Operating Cost
http://www.cottoninc.com/EFSConference/homepage.cfm?page=1099
Objective Function:
Min Z = (C1*P1) + (C2*P2) + (C3*P3) + + (Cn*Pn)
S.T. Constraints
L1*P1 + L2*P2 + L3*P3 + + Ln*Pn Lr S1*P1 + S2*P2 + S3*P3 + + Sn*Pn Sr M1*P1 + M2*P2 + M3*P3 + + Mn*Pn Mr
Example:
Aim:
To manufacture 10 Tex cotton yarn
The values shown above are examples and do not represent any cottons as such.
2.05
1.70
1.66
The values shown above are examples and do not represent any cottons as such.
Objective Function:
Min Z = (2.05*P1) + (1.70*P2) + (1.66*P3)
S.T. Constraints:
33*P1 + 31*P2 + 30*P3 32 24*P1 + 20.5*P2 + 19*P3 21.5
Non-Negativity Constraints: P1, P2, P3 0 P1, P2, P3 values are obtained by solving this LP Model using SIMPLEX method (Microsoft Excel can be used)
Results:
Objective Function Value: Min Z = 1.925
Conclusion:
LPT can be efficiently used in cotton mixing LPT eliminates wastage of raw materials and hence reduces the total Production Cost.