TY - JOUR
T1 - A vendor-managed inventory model for a three-layer supply chain considering exponential demand, imperfect system, and remanufacturing
AU - Salas-Navarro, Katherinne
AU - Florez, Whady F.
AU - Cárdenas-Barrón, Leopoldo Eduardo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, The Author(s).
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - EThis paper presents a vendor-managed inventory model for a three-layer supply chain comprised of suppliers, manufacturers, and retailers. This model considers an imperfect production system with a deterministic percentage of defective and deteriorated items, exponential demand for perishable products, and operational costs. The VMI model maximizes the benefits, assuming a Stackelberg approach to find the optimal values of replenishment lot sizes, production rates, selling prices, and product cycle length. A solution algorithm is developed to find the optimal solutions. A case study of the Dairy Industry for highly perishable products is provided to illustrate the applications, evaluate the performance, and obtain managerial insights. The results show that the percentage of defective and deteriorated items and remanufacturing rates are crucial in replenishment, production, and selling policies. The VMI agreement includes remanufacturing defective products to obtain new dairy derivates. The deteriorated products can be sold as near-expired products or inputs for compost, fertilizers, etc. Finally, some conclusions and future research lines are provided.
AB - EThis paper presents a vendor-managed inventory model for a three-layer supply chain comprised of suppliers, manufacturers, and retailers. This model considers an imperfect production system with a deterministic percentage of defective and deteriorated items, exponential demand for perishable products, and operational costs. The VMI model maximizes the benefits, assuming a Stackelberg approach to find the optimal values of replenishment lot sizes, production rates, selling prices, and product cycle length. A solution algorithm is developed to find the optimal solutions. A case study of the Dairy Industry for highly perishable products is provided to illustrate the applications, evaluate the performance, and obtain managerial insights. The results show that the percentage of defective and deteriorated items and remanufacturing rates are crucial in replenishment, production, and selling policies. The VMI agreement includes remanufacturing defective products to obtain new dairy derivates. The deteriorated products can be sold as near-expired products or inputs for compost, fertilizers, etc. Finally, some conclusions and future research lines are provided.
KW - Deteriorating item
KW - Exponential demand
KW - Inventory
KW - Remanufacturing
KW - VMI
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85181461182&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10479-023-05793-6
DO - 10.1007/s10479-023-05793-6
M3 - Artículo en revista científica indexada
AN - SCOPUS:85181461182
SN - 0254-5330
JO - Annals of Operations Research
JF - Annals of Operations Research
ER -