2024
Authors
Silva, MF; Rebelo, PM; Sobreira, H; Ribeiro, F;
Publication
FLEXIBLE AUTOMATION AND INTELLIGENT MANUFACTURING: ESTABLISHING BRIDGES FOR MORE SUSTAINABLE MANUFACTURING SYSTEMS, FAIM 2023, VOL 2
Abstract
Logistics chains are being increasingly developed due to several factors, among which the exponential growth of e-commerce. Crossdocking is a logistics strategy used by several companies from varied economic sectors, applied in warehouses and distribution centres. In this context, it is the objective of the CrossLog - Automatic Mixed-Palletizing for Crossdocking Logistics Centers Project, to investigate and study an automated and collaborative crossdocking system, capable of moving and managing the flow of products within the warehouse in the fastest and safest way. In its scope, this paper describes the concept and architecture envisioned for the crossdocking system developed in the scope of the CrossLog Project. One of its main distinguishing characteristics is the use of Autonomous Mobile Robots for performing much of the operations traditionally performed by human operators in today's logistics centres.
2024
Authors
dos Santos, F; Costa, L; Varela, L;
Publication
OPTIMIZATION, LEARNING ALGORITHMS AND APPLICATIONS, OL2A 2024, PT I
Abstract
Nowadays, the industrial market is characterised by high levels of competition, with customers increasingly demanding in terms of quality, delivery times, costs, etc.. However, with increasing demand and the need to increase productivity, many companies in recent years have dedicated themselves to decentralising their factories, thus moving to distributed production. Today's manufacturing systems are distributed in the sense that there are several jobs that have to be carry out on machines located in different factories. This paper proposes a multi-objective distributed job shop scheduling model with unrelated parallel machines and sequence-dependent setup times. The transport time of raw materials to carry out a given job to a factory is also taken into account. Small instances of the problem were solved using NSGA-III with the aim of simultaneously minimising two objectives: the makespan and average completion time. Preliminary results show the validity of this approach.
2024
Authors
dos Santos, F; Costa, L; Varela, L;
Publication
COMPUTATIONAL SCIENCE AND ITS APPLICATIONS-ICCSA 2024 WORKSHOPS, PT II
Abstract
Job shop scheduling problems are common in the engineering field. In spite of some approaches consider just the most important objective to optimize, several other conflicting criteria are also important. Multi-objective optimization algorithms can be used to solve these problems optimizing, simultaneously, two or more objectives. However, when the number of objectives increases, the problems become more challenging. This paper presents the results of the optimization of a set of job shop scheduling with unrelated parallel machines and sequence-dependent setup times, using the NSGA-III. Several instances with different sizes in terms of number of jobs and machines are considered. The goal is to assign jobs to machines in order to simultaneously minimize the maximum job completion time (makespan), the average job completion time and the standard deviation of the job completion time. These results are analysed and confirm the validity and highlight the advantages of this approach.
2024
Authors
Silva, FM; Queiros, C; Pereira, M; Pinho, T; Barroso, T; Magalhaes, S; Boaventura, J; Santos, F; Cunha, M; Martins, RC;
Publication
COMPUTERS AND ELECTRONICS IN AGRICULTURE
Abstract
Fertilization is paramount for agriculture productivity and food security. Plant nutrition pre-established recipes and nutrient uptake are rarely managed by changing the fertilizer composition at the different stages of the plant life cycle. Herein we perform a literature review analysis - since the year 2000 and onwards - of the state-of-the-art capabilities of Nitrogen, Phosphorous, and Potassium (NPK) sensors for liquid fertilizers ( e.g. , hydroponics). From the initial search hits of 1660 results, only 53 publications had relevant information for this topic; from these, only 9 had NPK quantitative information. Qualitative analysis was performed by determining the number of publications for each nutrient, according to sample complexity and existing single, multiplexed or hybrid technologies. Quantitative assessment was performed by extracting the bias and linearity, the limit of detection and concentration ranges of sensor operation, framed into the context of the sensor technology development stage and sample compositional complexity. The most common technologies are colorimetry, ionselective electrodes, optrodes, chemosensors, and optical spectroscopy. The most abundant technologies are for nitrate quantification, from which ion-selective electrodes are the most widely used technology, and sensors for phosphate quantification are the less developed. Most are at low technological levels of development, not dealing with the complexity of agriculture samples due to matrix effects and interference. Measuring the fertilizer composition, nutrient uptake, the state of the chemical network, and controlling the release of nutrients using new functional materials, is one of the most important challenges ahead for the existence of precision fertilization. Intelligent sensing and smart materials are today the most successful strategy for dealing with matrix effects and interferences, being led by ion-selective electrodes and spectroscopy technologies.
2024
Authors
Krishna, MS; Machado, P; Otuka, RI; Yahaya, SW; Neves dos Santos, F; Ihianle, IK;
Publication
Abstract
2024
Authors
Reis-Pereira, M; Mazivila, SJ; Tavares, F; dos Santos, FN; Cunha, M;
Publication
SMART AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGY
Abstract
A novel non-destructive analytical method for early diagnosis of two bacterial diseases, Pseudomonas syringae and Xanthomonas euvesicatoria, in tomato plants, using ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) transmittance spectroscopy and chemometric models, is developed. Plant-pathogen interactions caused tissue damage that generated non-linear data patterns compared to the control set (healthy samples), which challenges traditional discrimination models, even when employing non-linear discriminant approaches. Alternatively, an authentication task to conduct oneclass classification relying on a data-driven version of soft independent modeling of class analogy (DD-SIMCA) is a wise choice due to its quadratic approach, proper to deal with non-linear data. DD-SIMCA detached the target class (control healthy plant leaflet tissues) from all other samples (target class and non-target class of plant leaflet tissues inoculated with two bacteria, even before the manifestation of macroscopic lesions associated with the diseases) by capturing the main similarities within the samples of the target class through the full distance that acts as a classification analytical signal, reaching 100 % sensitivity in the training and validation sets. Multivariate curve resolution - alternating least-squares (MCR-ALS) constrained analysis allowed the description of the bacterial inoculation process on diseased tissues through pure spectral signatures. DD-SIMCA results indicate that non-target class of samples with higher proximity to the acceptance boundary suggested that they were at earlier stages of infection when compared to more distant ones, presenting lower full distance values. These findings reveal that a handheld UV-Vis transmittance spectrometer is sufficiently sensitive to be used in acquiring biological data with suitable chemometric models for early disease diagnosis and prompt intervention.
The access to the final selection minute is only available to applicants.
Please check the confirmation e-mail of your application to obtain the access code.