Operation materials

Operation materials are used to model the consumption and production of material by operations.

If an operation Op is consuming 2 units of part A and 1 unit of part B to produce 3 units of part C, then this table should contain three records:

operation

quantity

item

type

Op

-2

A

Start

Op

-1

B

Start

Op

3

C

End

If the same operation produces 1 units of part C you can leave out the third record. It’s implicitly assumed from the item field in the operation table.

operation

quantity

item

type

Op

-2

A

Start

Op

-1

B

Start

Different types are available:

  • start:
    Consume (or produce) material at the start of a manufacturing order, right after any setup time on the loaded resource has been completed.
    The quantity consumed or produced is proportional to the quantity of the manufacturing order.
  • end:
    Produce (or consume) material at the end of a manufacturing order.
    The quantity consumed or produced is proportional to the quantity of the manufacturing order.
  • transfer_batch:
    Consume (or produce) material in a number of batches of fixed size at various moments during the total duration of the manufacturing order (not including the setup time on the loaded resource).

Field

Type

Description

item

item

Material being consumed or produced.
This is a required field.

operation

operation

Operation to which the material flow is associated.
This is a required field.

quantity

double

Material quantity being consumed or produced per unit of the manufacturing order.
Default value is 1.0.

quantity_fixed

double

Fixed material consumption or production per manufacturing order, independent of the size of the manufacturing order.
This is useful to model a constant scrap rate for calibration or testing, modeling a throw-away prodcution tool, etc…
Default value is 0.0.

transferbatch

double

Batch size by in which material is produced or consumed.
Only relevant for flows of type batch_transfer.
The default value is null, in which case we default to produce at the end when the quantity is positive, or consume at the start when the quantity is negative.
To protect against a big impact on performance and memory footprint we limit the number of material transfer batches to 50 per manufacturing order.

offset

duration

Time offset relative to the start or end date of the manufacturing order for the material production or consumption.
Eg offset is 1 day for a flow of type ‘end’ -> Material is produced 1 day after the end of the manufacturing order -> This can be used to model a cooldown, drying or testing time.
Eg offset is -1 day for a flow of type ‘start’ -> Material is consumed 1 day before the start of the manufacturing order -> This can be used to model a material preparation or picking time.

effective_start

dateTime

Date after which the material consumption is valid.
Before this date the planned quantity is always 0.

effective_end

dateTime

Date at which the material consumption becomes invalid.
After this date (and also at the exact date) the planned quantity is always 0.

priority

integer

Priority of the flow, used in case of alternate flows.
The default is 1.
Lower numbers indicate more preferred flows.

name

non-empty string

Optional name of the flow.
All flows with the same name are considered to be alternates of each other.

search

string

Defines the order of preference among the alternate flows.
The valid choices are:
  • PRIORITY
    Select the alternate with the lowest priority number.
    This is the default.
  • MINCOST
    Select the alternate which gives the lowest cost.
    The cost includes the cost of all upstream operations, resources and buffers.
  • MINPENALTY
    Select the alternate which gives the lowest penalty.
    The penalty includes the penalty of all penalties incurred in the upstream plan along the flow.
  • MINCOSTPENALTY
    Select the alternate which gives the lowest sum of the cost and penalty.
    The sum is computed for the complete upstream path.