Deterministic economic order quantity models with partial backlogging when demand and cost are fluctuating with time

From MaRDI portal
Publication:4661042

DOI10.1057/palgrave.jors.2601678zbMath1060.90013OpenAlexW1980508228MaRDI QIDQ4661042

No author found.

Publication date: 4 April 2005

Published in: Journal of the Operational Research Society (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.jors.2601678




Related Items

Manufacturing lot-sizing, procurement and delivery schedules over a finite planning horizonIntegrating deterioration and lifetime constraints in production and supply chain planning: a surveyPricing and replenishment policies in dual-channel supply chain under continuous unit cost decreaseOptimal inventory policies for deteriorating items with trapezoidal-type demand patterns and maximum lifetimes under upstream and downstream trade creditsReview of inventory systems with deterioration since 2001A particle swarm optimization for solving joint pricing and lot-sizing problem with fluctuating demand and unit purchasing costAn optimal shipment strategy for imperfect items in a stock-out situationOptimal inventory policies for time varying deteriorating items with dynamic demand under upstream and downstream trade credit by discounted cash-flow analysisA partial backlogging inventory model for deteriorating items with fluctuating selling price and purchasing costUnnamed ItemPartial backlogging inventory lot-size models for deteriorating items with fluctuating demand under inflationA generalized economic order quantity model with deteriorating items and time varying demand, deterioration, and costsDeterministic inventory lot-size models with shortages for fluctuating demand and unit purchase costAN ECONOMIC PRODUCTION LOT SIZE FOR CONTINUOUS DECREASE IN UNIT PRODUCTION COSTDetermining optimal selling price and lot size with process reliability and partial backlogging considerationsA multi-warehouse partial backlogging inventory model for deteriorating items under inflation when a delay in payment is permissible