William Hinsberg, Joy Cheng, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2010
This paper addresses the control of traffic when there are large numbers of Automatic Guided Vehicles (AGV's) in a factory. Although in most existing systems, AGV's follow predetermined tracks with few switches, newer AGV technology will allow each vehicle to follow unconstrained paths. This paper analyzes several possible policies for managing AGV's to minimize the impact of traffic jams. In a grid-iron network of roads, it is shown that traffic contention can have a large effect on the collective performance of AGV's. It is shown that a particular traffic policy permits the AGVs to be autonomous and independent while avoiding deadlocks. This policy is shown to be close to optimal, even for large numbers of vehicles. It is also shown under what conditions it is beneficial to modify the factory to have highways and superhighways. © 1988 IEEE
William Hinsberg, Joy Cheng, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2010
Eric Price, David P. Woodruff
FOCS 2011
Elliot Linzer, M. Vetterli
Computing
Beomseok Nam, Henrique Andrade, et al.
ACM/IEEE SC 2006